In Phoenix Arizona and all the surrounding cities – 82 percent of the water you drink is treated sewage water.   In sewage water, there are pathogens and viruses and E.coli.  All of our drinking water units should have a special filter that disintegrates all pathogens, viruses, and E.coli.

The clarifier reverse osmosis unit will have an extra filter that will disintegrate all pathogens, viruses, and E.coli.

We now have these units; just call us at (480) 969-7251.  

In 1926 the Grand Canyon Village of Arizona began utilizing reclaimed water for these purposes (with the first wastewater treatment plants in the world):

Supply water for power generation

Sante Fe Railroad steam locomotives, and flushing toilets

Landscape, irrigation, flushing toilets

Drinking water

As I recently visited Imperial Beach in California and I happened onto this sign.

This sign reads Warning! Beach water may contain sewage and may cause illness.

They’ve been up for weeks because of an ongoing release of sewage from a broken-down treatment plant in Tijuana that releases effluent at a clip of 40 million gallons per day, said Paloma Aguirre, an Imperial Beach City Council member, and avid surfer.

What if the treated sewage water Arizona is providing for our drinking water is contaminated with pathogens, E.coli and coliform?

What if Arizona’s sewage-treated drinking water is not properly treated sometimes and contaminates your drinking water with coliform, E.coli, or pathogens (what if you die)?

In Arizona; drinking sewage water may cause us illness.

With Boyett’s family clarify reverse osmosis unit – we will take this health concern away from you.

The extra filter we add contains a media that is silver-coated alumina.  As the water is running over this media – the silver-coated alumina media neutralized the electrons in the pathogens, E.coli, and the coliform (the E.coli, pathogens, and coliform molecules will then disintegrate).  All your Arizona drinking water will be safe by using this Boyett’s family clarify reverse osmosis service.  The powerful media that is contained within this extra filter will eliminate any pathogens, E.coli, and coliform from your Arizona drinking water.  It is very important this filter be changed. 

We utilize a principle known as ‘indubitably changing your rental water treatment equipment’ ; goes like this:

1 we send a postcard asking you to call us to schedule this important free service

2 we send an email

3 we send a letter

4 I stop by as the owner of our company and ask when we can schedule this service (I will leave a note on your front door ‘if you are not home’).  I record this information in the remarks on your account.

We are destined and determined to exchange your rental water treatment when it is due.

Very seldom do I stop by a client’s home.  You all do a great job helping us schedule this service.  I am not afraid to stop by and ask you because this service is so important. 

If regular schedule action is not followed through; your Arizona water treatment equipment will contaminate your water and allow E.coli, coliform, and pathogens to flow into your drinking water.

It was in 1972, that the Arizona Department of Health Services adopted the state’s first rules governing reclaimed water quality and use, some of the first in the nation. Fast forward another decade to 1983, when Arizona’s largest treatment plant, at 91st Avenue in Phoenix, began supplying about 60 million gallons per day of reclaimed water to the Palo Verde Nuclear Generating Station west of Buckeye. Palo Verde, the largest nuclear power generator in the US, is unique in the world for being wholly cooled by reclaimed water.

I am fortunate to claim my grandfather Wilford Hayden (his family called him Boppi) is one of the founding fathers of our water infrastructure.  He sat on the board of the Salt River Project; helping to develop the structure for a sustainable water source for future citizens and farmers.

This is a picture of my founder mother (Roberta Jean Hayden Boyett) and my grandfather Boppi.

Another one of my shirt tail relatives is Senator Carl Hayden (he claimed my mother and her siblings as his nieces and nephews).  Helped us bring the extra water we have from the Colorado River (CAP canal).

As a fourth-generation Phoenician Arizonian, I care about my drinking water and I care about your drinking water.

Like that new Zac Brown song says: we need to come together on this: because we are all in the same boat – fishing in the same moat.

My family’s commitment to you is this: the rental water treatment we provide to your home will be of the highest quality and be of the highest efficiency available to us.  All of our rental water treatment equipment is provided to you on a month-by-month basis (there is never a contract).  We are now fortunate to work with over 8,000 clients that rent their water treatment equipment from us.  We have been fortunate to work with many of our clients at 7 of their homes (the average person moves every 3 years).  We are fortunate to work with three generations of people (the man who started Treeland Nurseries worked at Boyett’s family ‘we worked treating his Arizona water’; we now work with his children and his grandchildren -treating their Phoenix Arizona water’).   I say this humble for this reason: we work really hard to make you happy and keep you happy.  We will not rest until.  Our company structure is designed to work with you for many years – with happiness and great peace.

The year is 1999 and the Arizona Department of Environmental Quality (ADEQ) receives full authority from the Legislature to reuse reclaimed water for our drinking water.  This action spurred the dramatic increase in treated wastewater to be used for your drinking water.  Arizona is the nation’s leader in turning our toilet water into our drinking water.

According to an ASU study, 82 percent of all treated wastewater generated within the Phoenix Active Management Area (60 percent of Arizona’s population) is beneficially reused or recharged.

We feel our Boyett’s family clarify filter will raise the standard for all Residential, Business, and Industrial water treatment services to guarantee the removal of fecal coliform bacteria.  The silver-coated alumina media will disintegrate all fecal coliform bacteria from your drinking water.

Based upon the current standards and desires of the founding water fathers at this time: Our Arizona drinking water is coming from our toilets for a long time (kind of like the Space Station ‘all their water is recycled from waste’).

This is the CEO and inventor of the Clairify filter.  

Our Clairify water-saving reverse osmosis drinking water system will utilize the Clairify filter with quantum disinfection (QD).  QD is a new generation of nanocomposite materials with activated surfaces that kills pathogens like bacteria (E Coli, Staphylococcus, Legionella,  viruses (MS2), and protozoa (Cryptosporidium) from water, with no power, no power; no chemicals.

No chemicals – No power – No pathogens – no electricity.

If I run our reverse osmosis water through this filter – this will remove any pathogens.

Our Clarify water-saving reverse osmosis drinking water system will utilize the Clairify filter with

quantum disinfection (QD). QD is a new generation of nanocomposite materials with activated surfaces

that kills pathogens like bacteria (E Coli, Staphylococcus, Legionella, viruses (MS2), and protozoa

(Cryptosporidium) from water, with no power, no power; no chemicals.

QD uses quantum mechanic principles

Quantum disinfection is a new generation of nanocomposite materials with activated surfaces that kill pathogens like bacteria (E.coli, Staphylococcus, Legionella, viruses (MS2), and protozoa (Cryptosporidium) from water, with no power, no chemicals, and no maintenance.

Quantum Disinfection is a revolutionary technology that uses the quantum mechanic principles of electron movements in micro-crystals creating powerful catalysts applied for drinking water purification.

This is the media that will be placed into our clarify filter (it is silver-coated alumina).  When the water runs over this media it will neutralize the electrons in the really bad water molecules and cause the bad bad water molecules to disintegrate.  When your water runs over our beads – no more toilet water.

It is made in the USA

sources:

In this blog and in all my other blogs I give these sources all the credit.  I am humbly grateful to have this resource to disseminate this important information.  Thank you for all your hard work collecting all these facts and information.  I take no credit for the information I have shared.

https://duckduckgo.com/?q=testing+wastewater+for+covid+19&t=osx&ia=web

https://www.cnbc.com/2022/08/19/direct-potable-reuse-why-drinking-water-could-include-recycled-sewage.html

https://wrrc.arizona.edu/reuse-whats-in-store

https://fox5sandiego.com/news/border-report/ocean-off-limits-as-40-million-gallons-of-mexican-sewage-flow-north-of-the-border-daily/#:~:text=It’s%20because%20there%20is%20a,Memorial%20Day%20weekend%20was%20closed.

https://kjzz.org/content/190239/did-you-know-hayden-road-named-scottsdale-family#:~:text=Hayden%20Road%20runs%20from%20around,of%20McDowell%20and%20Hayden%20roads.&text=Arroyo%20Rodriguez%2FKJZZ-,Don%20Carlos%20is%20a%20street%20name%20in,honors%20Tempe%20founder%20Charles%20Hayden.

On two separate social occasions, Senator Carl Hayden claimed my founder mother and her siblings as his nieces and nephews (one was at the Wigwam Resort, Litchfield Park AZ).  My Aunt Cynthia Hayden is aware of these and will be happy to authenticate this claim.

https://wateruseitwisely.com/blog/arizona-water-pioneers-carl-hayden/

https://www.popsci.com/how-iss-recycles-air-and-water/

Desire – not only for the select few.   A celebration of a great man’s work. 040614

Dear Dale and Annetta:

K had taped some Merle Haggard records for me to listen to on the way home from Texas.  On one of them is a song entitled “In the Good Old Days When Times Were Bad”.  He grew up in a labor camp in California and our life was a picnic compared to what he describes.  But there are two lines in the song that depict my thoughts of the “good old days” so perfectly:

No amount of money could buy from me the memories I have of then

No amount of money could pay me to go back and do it again.

Annetta and I are so extremely lucky to have you, Dale, and Nadine who are willing to exert so much effort to make a gathering special.  Thanks for all the hard work and planning.

Last night as I drove in I wished that I could write a letter right then while my mind was on “the good old days”.  It seemed as though I’d been in a different world.  It seemed as though it had taken those several days last week to “shift down” and get my mind zeroed in.  Then it was perfect.  I had all day to think about it in the atmosphere of Daddy’s pickup.

I wondered if Annetta would say “No amount of money could buy from me the memories I have of them”.  Dale and I had such things as: spraying mesquites with Daddy, working calves, riding horses, spending hours swimming in the tank, dogs, hunting skunks with Si and Jap and families, hunting rattlesnakes with Si and Jap and families, Dale working for the highway, Brian working for Tom Moore, combining, the last years of the threshing machine (I ran a bundle wagon Dale had to be around doing something(, driving the tractor, Brian drove horses raking hay, hauling hay and cultivating for several years (I doubt if Dale was old enough at the time),  hunting rabbits, fishing, spending time at Si’s and at Jap’s and with Don and Bert, killing hogs (we would scald them in  a barrel then pull and 4 wheel trailer in the garage and everybody stood around it and cut meat and made sausage),  helping mother make lye soap, playing in the big barn at Jap’s, going up every Saturday after the mail ran to get Edith or Marza to read the funny papers to us,  burning mesquites, hauling and chopping wood,  shocking feed and grain, stacking feed, getting drip cans and barrels ready for Daddy, Si and Jap to make their middle of the night “runs’, pumping up tires with the old hand pumps, turning the forge blower in the old shop,  fetching the turkeys every night from the Moore’s place,  killing rats at the big barn, etc. 

Seems like I spent hundreds of hours on horseback and with my dogs.  At the time I thought it was wonderful.  Even when the mules ate the oilcloth top off the top of the car and we sneaked into town to get some more to recover it because the folks were embarrassed, I thought it was great fun.  Do you remember when we had the old old cars and used to get stuck coming and going to town all the time before they improved the roads?

But I wonder what Annetta did with her time and how she thinks about those old times…..

Dale introduced a whole new idea to me on this trip.  It is a revelation to me.   I had always followed the crowd in thinking of “poor old daddy”, forced out of the pocket of his brothers’ protection and fellowship by a wife who rebelled against the system.  Blue, unimaginative, uncreative, not mechanical, and just a “worker ant”.  How could I have known him so well and totally missed the whole point?

He didn’t just sit in the porch swing and brood as I thought he did.  He did some of that – but also he thought and planned how to overcome the disadvantages of having nothing to work with and accomplish what I now suddenly realize to be amazing and innovative feats.  He was only one step away from innovation that even now that bunch down there can’t even comprehend.  He killed the trees, cleared the trees (no one else thought the clearing necessary – especially me when I had to help do it), and had the shredder bought.  His ground was one of the few places that could have been mowed with that shredder (it would have to be done before the Broom Weed stalks got big) and totally controlled the Broom Weeds, mesquites, and everything else.  He could have tripled his pasture productivity.  

But the things he did accomplish are now astounding to me.  He literally created an untried industry by taking an 85 horsepower 1937 Ford Sedan (that I had turned upside down while dodging a skunk and that he had jacked the roof back up with house jacks) and a two-wheel trailer and created the system, capital, and equipment necessary to jerk himself out of poverty.  

To my knowledge, he had almost zero encouragement or acknowledgment, or praise.  He figured out how to bid jobs at a profit (I couldn’t begin to bid on one of those jobs) and sell people on the fact that it would work – and that even though it was more expensive than air-spraying, it was a better way to go.  I knew that he did these things but the significance did not occur to me.

I want to share with you something that made my mouth drop open when I thought of it on the way back yesterday.  Daddy figured out how to roll a drum from the ground up onto a trailer, raise the drum up, haul it to the site, lay it down, fill the can and pour the kerosene, tip the drum up, lower another one, empty it, then go back to the barrel area and start all over again. 

Think of this parallel.  When I started in the soft water business I had a 1957 Ford ½-ton pickup.  Delivering the tanks was no problem for the first few customers because I just laid a few tanks in the bed of the pickup, raised the tailgate, and ran the route.  As the business grew there was no way I could make enough trips to make the deliveries.  Everybody else had larger trucks with tank racks, but I could hardly afford to just keep that pickup running.  So I left the tailgate down and laid 6 tanks on it,  stood 2 rows of 6 tanks upright against the cab and tied them so they wouldn’t fall, stood 3 tanks upright in front of each fender well, and made a rack to keep them standing.  I would deliver the 6 off the tailgate, set them off in the street, lay the first row of 6 down, pull the other row over the top onto the tailgate, lift the ones on the street over and set them against the cab, stand up the other 6 and tie them, and just keep on trucking.  I had a lot of 40 tank routes in time and we used that system for about 3 years until we bought a 1 ½ ton truck with racks and would carry 50 tanks.

Over the years I have talked business with a high percentage of the soft water operators in the West and none of those have done it like that or in my opinion, would have even considered it.  That’s over 2 tons of tanks and handling the tanks enough ties each trip to run several routes.  Knowing what I know now if someone asked me what the chances are of running a route system in that manner for more than a week (we didn’t have a backup pickup), I would say that the chances of it succeeding would be zero minus a bunch.  Now we have 1-ton trucks with racks that carry 30 tanks and make 2 trips (one heavy and one light) and a 50-tank route in just a small area of town is a day’s work for a man.  The routes in Phoenix at the start covered the whole town.  I gave Daddy credit for teaching me to work hard but it never occurred to me one time before this trip that he also taught me the basis of the system.  It sort of startles me.

As you observe our peers that are still at Ibex it is easy to see that the big thing Mother and Daddy gave us was opportunity.  To know that there was opportunity for something better for our “lot” in that circumstance, in my opinion, took more than foresight.  I give Mother credit for almost of that.   But it seems to me that Mother was afforded some degree of credit for most of that.  But seems to me that Mother was afforded some credit – maybe not all she deserved, but some.  I believe that I, along with most everyone else, sold Daddy “way short”.

I just mentioned opportunity.   I laughed and laughed about this towards the end of yesterday.  I had planned to shut it down and sleep at El Paso so I had a full cup of tobacco juice in one hand that I was looking forward to emptying when I stopped.  When I found myself on the El Paso freeway I discovered two things:  the no-doze pills that Nadine had suggested to me had me “bug eyed” as a bullfrog and I was keyed up like a racehorse and no way was I going to get to sleep.  Also, I discovered if I could maintain a 50-plus speed, I could stay in the fast lane and get through town in a hurry.  There were lots of cars and little margin for error.

I had spent a “two hands on the wheel” heads-up day because I had discovered by following Dale that 55 mph was 62 on the pickup speedometer.  I decided to go 57 all day so I was holding it just over the 64 mark.  At that speed, it was sort of like riding a bronco.  Everything would be great and then there would be an uneven place in the road and I would feel the steering neutralize.  The pickup would take off like a shot in some instant undeterminable direction.  There were two challenges: react in the right direction and don’t over-correct.  I kept saying to myself, “Brian, don’t reenact the ‘dodge the skunk’ trick”.

So there I was, weaving my way through El Paso, desperately trying to stay off of everybody and trying to keep from spilling my cup all over everything.  I could see that by the way, a few people honked at me that thought I was either drunk or some tobacco chewing hayseed in an old pickup that couldn’t drive very well and they were afraid I was going to stack them up.

Where the opportunity angle comes in is that I enjoyed playing out that role at about 3 p.m. and later that night I joined Roberta and the kids at a party at a 20,000-plus-square-foot house that cost between 8 and 9 million dollars to build.  It is elegant.  I had been thinking during the day that the opportunity to play out the latter role sort of typifies the whole thing in one day’s time.

The trip was great.  Other than a feeling (between my shoulder blades) like I’d been driving the tractor all day, I feel better than I thought I would after being up almost around the clock.  I had cloud cover until past Pecos.  Both legs are blistered on top from the sun and rubbed raw on the back from the wires of the seat cushion.

We are thrilled to have the pickup out here, Dale.  Thanks.  I feel like we “made” a few memories and revived a lot of others.  We’ll surely laugh a lot about Annett’s and Mike’s walks in the sun and a few other things.

I wanted to write this letter to you before I have to force my mind back into this “century” tomorrow.  I am so grateful for everything and everybody who has and has had a part.

No amount of money could buy from me the memories I have of then

No amount of money could pay me to go back and do it again.

I love you both,

Brian

 (1)

William Brian Boyett, Annetta Boyett, Dale Boyett The photo was taken on 19 June 1996 at the Botanical Gardens in Denver, Colorado.

Brian Hayden Boyett standing by the 1963 Ford truck that William Brian Boyett drove from Texas to Arizona (non-stop).  This is the first Isuzu we added to our fleet.  Adding this Isuzu to our fleet utilization program – helped create sustainability.   We utilized this Isuzu as a delivery truck; then when it began aging we turned it into a service and installation vehicle.  This picture was taken in 1997.  We used this Isuzu truck in our company until 2006.  We still have and enjoy grandpa’s 1963 Ford F100.  

This is a picture of William Brian Boyett’s sister Annetta and her son Jonathan.  The Ford 1963 F100 is in the background.   The flowers you see are Texas Blue Bonnets (this is the Texas State Flower). 

This 1963 F100 Ford truck is still in our fleet today.  It will always be in our fleet ‘especially now; because it is now an important character in this very important story.  I have had many great experiences and adventures in this truck. My most memorable journeys in this truck are my drive from South Tempe to Arizona State University every day.  I carried my bike in the back; parked away from the ASU campus and rode my bike to class.  This truck epitomizes my simplicity, efficiency, and dependability.   Here is the thing regarding this truck: Whenever I called upon this vehicle for service; it always started on the first try and always accomplish any task for which it was assigned.  I was very touched by my father’s act of love to bring this truck to me (a 1,059-mile ‘non-stop journey’ in a farm truck).  This was one of many acts of kindness my father showed to me. 

Remembering My Big Brother Brian

By Annetta Boyett

        In Albany High School he was known as “Salty” (Brian = brine).  When he moved on to Texas Tech, he became Brian again, but he found that people had trouble understanding his last name when he pronounced it “Boyt”, as our clan had done from time immemorial.  So to make it clearer, he began to introduce himself as Brian Boy-yett. (When he ran for representative of the Student Council, his campaign posters read “Brian is the best Boy-yett to be Student Council representative”.  He was elected, of course.)

        When my other brother Dale and I left home we followed his example.  Now in our old age, we continue to pronounce our last name “Boy-yett”, and this is just one small example of the influence that our elder brother has had on our lives.

        I have one million memories of my big brother, but if I had to give them all away and could keep only one, this is the one it would be.  When Brian graduated from Texas Tech he took a job with the National Cotton Council out of Phoenix. Periodically he would have to drive to the Council’s base in Nashville on business, and then he would always come by to spend a few days with our parents and me on our modest West Texas farm.  (Dale had left home by then.)  One time, it was a hot, hot summer, we got a letter from Brian (we didn’t have a telephone) to say that he was coming to visit.  Great excitement.  Whenever he arrived he was always brimming over with news from the great world outside our farm about what he had done, and what he was going to do.  This time he brought along a new record – a 78, life was different then – of “rag” music and announced that he was going to teach me the dance that went along with it.  So after supper, Mother and Daddy went out to sit on the front porch and watch the fireflies while on the other side of the screen door Brian and I put the record on, and in our bare feet on the linoleum floor he taught me the “rag”.  It didn’t seem to be all that difficult; you just scooted around the floor trying to keep up with the very fast music. When we got to the end of the record we would start it right over again, dancing as hard as we could. Every so often when we got so hot that we thought we were about to expire, we would turn off the record player and go flop down on the front porch with Mother and Daddy.  They would laugh at us and we would laugh at ourselves and then we would all watch the fireflies together.  We were happy.

        Eventually, it got late, and we all went to bed.  The next morning we were surprised to see that Brian’s feet were all scratched because my toenails needed cutting.  We’d danced so madly that he’d not even noticed.

Here is a marketing story about Boyett’s Family Rayne Water Conditioning.

How we utilized William Brian Boyett’s legend, guns, and people to establish visibility, reputation, intrigue, allure, and stickiness for our dynamic duel whole house carbon filter and water softener.

Through the development of a product called Filtersorb SP3 we found that applying a whole house carbon filter with our offerings added great value to our client’s water treatment experiences.  Beginning with the Filtersorb SP3 product we began utilizing our own tools to create the marketing literature.  This saves time and money.  Therefore, when it came time to create a product and marketing piece for our new product (our dynamic duel whole house carbon filter and water softener) we pursued the same means to accomplish the task of developing this new brochure.   The following picture was taken at my house for the Filtersorb SP3.

To make our name for this new product (our dynamic duel whole house carbon filter and water softener) tie to a western duel we took a picture of a cowboy (that is me) drawing his gun. I used a tripod and my camera.  To give our new product stickiness we have decided to use William Brian Boyett’s accouterments.  The accouterments we have chosen are Brian’s Colt .45 peacemaker and his gun holster which hangs in Roberta Boyett’s Tempe Arizona home (in the TV room).  These items have great meaning to me and therefore give me passion as I develop this marketing program; and a desire for great success.  The gun holster was purchased in Sante Fe by William Brian Boyett.  Here is a picture of Brian wearing this gun holster.

My image can be seen in the reflection as I took this picture with my phone.   As I juxtaposed this picture in my business journal I made this note by the picture: these two sure loved one another after all those years.  Roberta told me that she was my father’s first (he was 32 years old).  I asked how did you know?  She said, “A girl knows”.  I thought to myself ‘I couldn’t have waited that long’, but this thought gave me high respect for this great man William Brian Boyett.    My father had patience in matters having to do with marriage.  In my opinion, one of their success formulas was the great passion they had for each other (and great respect).  

So I wanted to find out the story of William Brian Boyett’s Colt .45 Peacemaker.  I have seen this gun all my life.  I have played with this gun as a young boy conjuring images of shooting outlaws (or dueling).  I think I have even shot this gun; however, since it is so old ‘this may have been dangerous’.   I reached out to my Uncle Dale to see if he knew.   This is the e-mail which I sent.

How is Nadine?

How is Uncle Dale?

How did my father get this Colt .45 gun?

We are building a BB gun story to go along with our new product marketing campaign: dynamic duel

These are the future stories to be added to Desire.  You will be listed as my marketing designer. 

Thank you so much for helping me connect the dots. 

I didn’t really expect Uncle Dale to know, and I was right.  However, I am glad I asked.   This was a good decision.  It was in the form of Aunt Annetta’s beautiful story that the answer appeared.

Aunt Sarah

        She wasn’t really anyone’s aunt, at least as far as I knew.  She seemed ancient to me.  She lived by staying with one distant relative for a while and then moving on to another.  Once she had been around everybody she started over.  When it came to our turn to have her stay there was inevitably moaning and groaning from the rest of us, but Mother was kind to her. It appeared that nothing, either good or bad, had ever happened to Aunt Sarah.

        Once while she was staying with us, Mother’s father Sid Askew died.  Mother had never been close to him – he was distant, taciturn.  We kids were told to call him “Daddy Sid”, but this appellation did not involve affection. When we sometimes visited him on his little farm outside Woodson, Texas, he seemed not to take notice of any of us, even Mother.  I remember that he did once (silently) offer me a stick of chewing gum.  I was so shocked that instead of taking it I ran away.  I’m sorry about that now.

        Anyway, he got older and older and after a spell in Throckmorton Nursing Home, he died and was buried in Woodson Cemetery. Even though he had not made much of a mark on the world, there was one riveting thing about him.  Mother maintained that he had at one time been a deputy sheriff, and in this capacity had owned a Colt .45.  Was this true?  If so, did he still have it?  If so, where was it?

        Anyone who knew Brian at all can imagine how interested he was in the possibility of a Colt .45 that had actually been owned by his grandfather.  Mother had never felt able to ask her father anything about the gun. He was not fond of talking. But some days after the funeral it was necessary to go sort out his possessions, which had stayed in his little farmhouse while he was in the nursing home.  The members of this expedition were Mother, Brian, Aunt Sarah, and me.

        It was a great day.  I don’t know how old I was, but I was young enough to be in a lather of excitement because Momma had told me that I could have Daddy Sid’s old pots and pans for my playhouse. And of course, Brian’s enthusiasm was infectious.  Anyone who knew him remembers that too.  

        When we arrived we immediately rushed around looking for the gun. Daddy Sid had lived in only one room of the modest farmhouse. There were a few mostly empty cupboards, a trunk full of old clothes, a bed, a sort of closet laced with cobwebs, but no Colt .45.  I greedily latched on to a skillet, a few cracked plates, some strange forks with only two tines, and – great treasure – a large tin canister painted green with a lid painted red, that Daddy Sid had kept flour in.  It would take pride of place in my playhouse.

        But Brian became increasingly downcast. The Colt .45 was not to be found. Had it been a myth all along?  Or if Daddy Sid had had it, would he not have sold it at some point when he needed the money? That scenario began to seem more and more likely. 

We were thinking of calling it a day and going home, when we noticed that Aunt Sarah was sitting by the trunk, going through it more carefully than we had, perhaps thinking that she could use some of the old clothes.  She was holding something in her lap that was wrapped in a ragged shirt.  Then she said, very, very quietly, “I’ve found the gun”.  Something had happened to Aunt Sarah at last.

How in the world could my Aunt Annetta remember these great details about such an obtuse object from so long ago?  I guess it helps to be smart.  This is what we know about Aunt Annetta.  Actually, all the Boyett kids were smart; at least from what I have observed.  They still impress me to this day.  As I was reading Annetta’s story I had to look up the meaning of the word taciturn.  I remembered that Annetta speaks several languages and continues to study and improve.  I know my Uncle Dale continues to improve each day through his musical contributions and this is how my father raised Katrina and me.  For example, we saw my father improving at every moment.   In my sister’s tribute to my father – she used the phrase ‘He was a man who couldn’t be kept still’.  He taught Katrina and me to improve processes continuously.  How?  By living the example he learned from his father. 

Aunt Annetta’s story has given William Brian Boyett’s Colt .45 great leverage in my mind; at least for me because my passion for this project has increased X 100; because I am the cowboy wearing the gun. 

Sources:

  1. Excerpt from a letter typed by K August 14, 1985, dictated by William Brian Boyett after driving grandpa’s (William Jesse Boyett) 1963 Ford F100 ‘farm truck (this truck had a low gear ratio)’ from Dale Boyett’s house in Dallas, Texas to Arizona (non-stop).  He brought this truck back to fix up for Hayden Boyett to utilize for transportation to business school at Arizona State University.   081122 This truck I drive weekly is an important source of transportation. 
  2. The 20,000 sq ft house (event: the wedding of Craig and Valarie Erickson circa summer of 1986) was that of Phil and Billie Erickson; two of the best business people, kind and generous people; great leaders, and family people.   In their smaller house, we were fortunate to be friends, associates, and neighbors for many years.  When my father passed Phil and Billie sent many roses.  In all my years of friendship and association, we saw so many acts of kindness and great humanity that it causes us to think about this family most every day.  We love you Ericksons; we are so proud of you.  Thank you for your many years of loyalty, support, and great friendship (you were the best neighbors in the world).  You all have left a fond and strong impression on me forever.   Shannon Erickson was my really great friend.  Whenever we communicate today; it is always very pleasant and productive.

Here is the other exciting feature of the clairify filter and all of Boyett’s family rental water treatment products:

All of our products are assembled in Mesa Arizona by specialized and qualified and bonafide water treatment specialists and technicians.  These are the same technicians that will install this equipment onto your homes or businesses and industrial facilities.

I wish to share with you our company structure.  Many of our factory processes still utilize salt.  Our company is advocating our industry move to the whole house in and out filters that do not waste water – don’t utilize salt and no electric.

This is a cement structure at our Boyett’s family factory in Mesa Arizona that is at the center of our salt processes.  This cement is near the area we evacuate our media and clean our salt tanks to reuse.  Salt disintegrates cement.  The same people who install your rental water treatment equipment (and provide service to your equipment) are the same people who are fixing our infrastructure here.

Flaking paint and deteriorating cement.

This is the first time Johnny has performed this type of work.  We are so impressed.  Johnny is a fast learner and you will see him at your home installing our rental water treatment equipment and changing the RO units and water softeners and installing hot water recirculating pumps to save our precious water.

We are all cross-trained and versatile; we can do many things to keep our company strong and meet your needs.  Our work is very focused: we rent water treatment equipment and we back this equipment up with our ‘indubitably exchange your rental water treatment equipment’.  If you need any service at any time; there is no cost to you.

Also in this picture is our famous Arizona State University, football player.  We are so proud we work with Dan on a daily basis.  It’s all smiling here.

This area Johnny repairs is such an important part of our infrastructure and the evolution of our industry.  Why:

Granular activated carbon media must be changed out to prevent contamination of your drinking water

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/8740859/

In five years we exchange this equipment at no charge.  When these tanks return to our factory we evacuate the media – sanitize the tanks and refill them with new granular activated carbon media.  By utilizing recycling methods – we save you thousands of dollars over the years.  By utilizing the method of ‘indubitably changing out your rental water treatment equipment we can ensure you have spectacular water all the time.

I say this humbly; our recycling processes are similar to SpaceX Reusable launch system.  We hope to make this method famous in our industry (this will save much waste in our landfills and it will help save the whales).

Source:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SpaceX_reusable_launch_system_development_program

Because we are all cross-trained to perform many important functions; we keep your costs down.  Our great technicians came together to sustain this important infrastructure.  By synergizing our human resources to great benefit; we will always save you money.

When our founders Brian and Roberta Boyett started our Boyett’s family water over 55 years ago; they simultaneously started a rental water treatment training school in which we have helped train many professional water treatment technicians.  We feel this training school is one of our secret ingredients.

Our entry-level position is a route technician (the hardest job in our industry).  We feel if a person survives in this position ‘they deserve to move into our service and installation technician training program  – which lasts at least three months.’  During this time our technicians will ride with three veteran water treatment technicians; a month at a time to learn and fine-tune the very important skills and talents needed to make you happy.   Before any of this happens they work for two weeks in our kitchen (they learn how our reverse osmosis and whole house water filters) are put together.

This is our hard-working and very intelligent Z loading or unloading his delivery truck.

These characters stopped by our office the other day.  They are always welcome here. 

This is an image of George that I enjoy observing every day.  George is always in my mind.  Not only is George a fine and honest and hard-working man; he has left his hand print on our company by bringing to our industry this process invention:

https://azh2o.com/pdf/Portable_Exchange_Laydown_Process.pdf

Many fine characters have crossed our paths that help us to be here today.  We are very grateful for both.

The man in the red shirt has indubitably exchanged more portable exchange tanks than anyone that I know.

One of the most interesting things in which I am involved is

A musical movement called Fast Track Music.  Each day we look for people who want to play a musical instrument, or sing.  We provide the instrument ‘free of charge’ and we sponsor two music lessons.  We feel that after two lessons a person will have the skill they need to pursue continually playing that instrument – continuing their education on YouTube; or learning from others.  We hope this will become a worldwide movement. 

To be a part of our movement; you must have courage and be unselfish (to have the courage to share your music): you must have your instrument in order to use it (if you don’t use it – you lose it).

https://youtu.be/OcnxGb23zmk

When it all comes together for us; the link above shows you the fun we had at the dinner party playing our fiddles there.  We had the honor to play our fiddles in exchange for a hot meal. The best food I have had.

I stopped by to visit Kathy at her home and she invited us to play at her development.

We all need to exercise so we have launched the path of travel exercise movement.  We would love for you to join us in this important endeavor.

As we walked the Imperial Beach we came upon this military base with many tents on the beach.  The Navy Seals were in the midst of Hell Week.  We are always so grateful to our veterans and all of our US forces that protect us.  We are running into many retired and active duty military clients that receive great care from our America.  This makes my heart happy.   Thank you America.  I love you.

Thank you for considering my crazy notions and reading my ramblings.  Thank you for your great support, loyalty, and trust in us.  If we can help you with rental water treatment for your home, business, or industry; we will love it much. We will do a good job there.

Respectfully, Brian Hayden Boyett

Text is best at 602.291.4157

Office (480) 969-7251 just ask for Hayden

hayden@hayden

This is the first time I have ever added ‘signifacantly’ to our existing story.  I like to know the back story (I’d like to share how our new product brochures are developed).  Our new products are developed (it is our onus to release a new whole house – waste free ‘no electric’ – filter every 6 months ; our next is the mercury filter) by listening to your recommendations ‘ you have given us so many great ideas: +Mg RO, whole house fluoride filter, the whole house lead filter, the whole house double carbon filter, the whole house pfas filter and soft water’.  We are so grateful to you for these great ideas.  When I google ‘what is the problem with fish in Arizona’

 The Arizona Department of Environmental Quality issued a consumption advisory about Flathead Catfish caught in Patagonia Lake due to elevated mercury levels.

https://news.azpm.org/p/news-splash/2022/8/10/212413-state-issues-mercury-warning-for-some-fish-caught-in-patagonia-lake/

These fish are swimming in the same water (upstream from us) that will be provided to us for drinking.   The problem is this:

What if the water we are drinking contains mercury; is this bad for my health?

Yes.

The inorganic salts of mercury are corrosive to the skin, eyes, and gastrointestinal tract, and may induce kidney toxicity if ingested.

https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/mercury-and-health#:~:text=Health%20effects%20of%20mercury%20exposure&text=The%20inorganic%20salts%20of%20mercury,induce%20kidney%20toxicity%20if%20ingested.

We are asking you to come together with us and help solve these serious Arizona drinking water problems.  Our objectives are these:

Develop whole house filters to solve serious Arizona water problems (do not waste water, no salt, no electricity); you will feel safe drinking the water in your home or business – every faucet in your home and business will have safe water (you will save water).  

Establish a small monthly fee that will save you at least $11,000 over a 10-year period.

Electronically date code every piece of rental water treatment equipment in your home.

Follow this process to maintain your rental water equipment with confidence (indubitably exchange your rental water treatment equipment: a. we send a postcard b. we call you c. we send you an email d. Hayden will stop by your door – knock and leave a note.  We are destined to exchange your rental water treatment equipment.)

If your water equipment is not exchanged on a regular basis; your water will be microbiologically contaminated.

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/8740859/

We take seriously exchanging your rental water equipment on time; with great passion and determination.

Within the next two weeks in our new products section, we will begin a new web page to present to you our clarify RO unit (which will disintegrates all e.coli, pathogens, and coliform molecules that may be present in your water).  82% of our Arizona drinking water is recycled wastewater.  Yuk!

It is because of a great company called International minute press, Mesa AZ that I will present this information in a legible and functional form.  S does such a great job taking my crazy notions and turning this into a substantial media you can understand.

Clarify reverse osmosis + Mg + pH + water-saving membrane

This RO unit will disintegrate all pathogens, viruses, and E.Coli.

In Phoenix Arizona and all the surrounding cities – 82 percent of the water you drink is treated sewage water.   In sewage water, there are pathogens and viruses and E.coli.  All of our drinking water units should have a special filter that disintegrates all pathogens, viruses, and E.coli.

We exchange our RO unit every 12 months (this includes all the filters and membrane and the clairify filter).

How does it work:

Phoenix metro area Arizona Toilet water to your drinking water faucet

This unit will make sure that no E.Coli, pathogens, or viruses get to your drinking water.  We exchange your RO unit every 12 months utilizing our ‘indubitably exchanging your rental water treatment equipment approach’.

Our family and shirttail relatives have a good history of improving our Phoenix Arizona metro water.

My grandfather

is one of the founding fathers of our water infrastructure.  He sat on the board of the Salt River Project; helping to develop the structure for a sustainable water source for

future citizens and farmers.

Another one of my shirt tail relatives is Senator Carl Hayden (he claimed my mother and her siblings as his nieces and nephews).  Helped us bring the extra water we have from the Colorado River (CAP canal).

As a fourth-generation Phoenician Arizonian, I care about my drinking water and I care about your drinking water.

This is Francisco loving his work.  If you receive a rental RO unit from our company – Francisco’s loving and expert care has been applied to your RO unit.  I love to watch this loving care applied to your pure water every single day.  It gets better.  Francisco gets better.   The principle of kaizen is alive and well in Francisco’s life and in his career.  In this image, Francisco is preparing the purified water fittings that transport the Clarify RO +Mg + pH water to each fitting and to the RO faucet.  If these fittings are not properly prepared; you will not receive delicious water.  If these fittings are not properly installed; your house could flood ‘you might have to rebuild your house because of black mold’.  I love to see this care.   We care to perform our work right the first time.

We would like to introduce to you our new RO leak control device (reverse osmosis systems Phoenix, Arizona). This is our third-generation RO leak control device. We first heard that we can apply a leak controller to protect your assets in 2007. From the time we installed our first leak controller; we have installed all of our RO units with leak controllers. We will always look for the best gear and parts to provide to you. I make this personal promise to you: if there is a better leak controller that is developed – we will always change yours to the best. Flowlok Leak Protection System This is how the RO leak protection device appears Part number FLK-14 FLK-Pad Images in this picture: Water supply, the FLK-14 and Reverse osmosis tubing According to the company that manufactures this product: The Flowlok leak protection system is a series of products designed to help customers’ safeguard against possible leaks from their water filtration System. The products help consumers by shutting off the water supply to their filtration system if water from a leak is detected. The Flowlok Leak Protection System requires no electricity and is an economical device that all water filtration owners should have to help minimize issues associated with water damage. Flowlok is easy to install and retrofits take no more than 15 minutes to perform. The Flowlok Leak Detector (FLK-14) is an innovative device that installs right below your water filtration system in minutes. No special tools are required and it does not need electricity (or batteries) to operate. Flowlok leak detectors (FLK-14) utilize a highly compressed safety disc (FLK-Pad) that expands when it absorbs water. Once the safety disc has detected water it expands and trips the Flowlok safety lever to shut off the water entering the water filtration device. Safety discs are replaceable. Boyett’s Family water treatment will provide these safety discs (FLK-Pad) at no charge. Boyett’s Family water treatment includes these as a standard feature on all of our reverse osmosis installations. If you rent an RO unit from our company; we will change this Flowlok unit every 5 years at no charge.

Leak detectors will prevent this:

No chemicals – No power – No pathogens – no electricity.

If I run our reverse osmosis water through this filter – this will remove any pathogens.

Our Clarify water-saving reverse osmosis drinking water system will utilize the Clairify filter with

quantum disinfection (QD). QD is a new generation of nanocomposite materials with activated surfaces

that kills pathogens like bacteria (E Coli, Staphylococcus, Legionella, viruses (MS2), and protozoa

(Cryptosporidium) from water, with no power, no power; no chemicals.

QD uses quantum mechanic principles

Quantum disinfection is a new generation of nanocomposite materials with activated surfaces that kill pathogens like bacteria (E.coli, Staphylococcus, Legionella, viruses (MS2), and protozoa (Cryptosporidium) from water, with no power, no chemicals, and no maintenance.

Quantum Disinfection is a revolutionary technology that uses the quantum mechanic principles of electron movements in micro-crystals creating powerful catalysts applied for drinking water purification.

This is the media that will be placed into our clarify filter (it is silver-coated alumina).  When the water runs over this media it will neutralize the electrons in the really bad water molecules and cause the bad bad water molecules to disintegrate.  When your water runs over our beads – no more toilet water.

It is made in the USA

This RO unit will disintegrate all pathogens, E.Coli, and Viruses

Installation fee: $225; if a hole is needed – the fee may be more

The monthly fee is $50/month plus tax

Sources:

https://azh2o.com/pdf/Leak_Controller_Flyer_page1_2.pdf

https://www.cnbc.com/2022/08/19/direct-potable-reuse-why-drinking-water-could-include-recycled-sewage.html

https://wrrc.arizona.edu/reuse-whats-in-store

https://fox5sandiego.com/news/border-report/ocean-off-limits-as-40-million-gallons-of-mexican-sewage-flow-north-of-the-border-daily/#:~:text=It’s%20because%20there%20is%20a,Memorial%20Day%20weekend%20was%20closed.

https://kjzz.org/content/190239/did-you-know-hayden-road-named-scottsdale-family#:~:text=Hayden%20Road%20runs%20from%20around,of%20McDowell%20and%20Hayden%20roads.&text=Arroyo%20Rodriguez%2FKJZZ-,Don%20Carlos%20is%20a%20street%20name%20in,honors%20Tempe%20founder%20Charles%20Hayden.

On two separate social occasions, Senator Carl Hayden claimed my founder’s mother and her siblings as his nieces and nephews (one was at the Wigwam Resort, Litchfield Park AZ).  My Aunt Cynthia Hayden is aware of these and will be happy to authenticate this claim.

https://wateruseitwisely.com/blog/arizona-water-pioneers-carl-hayden/

https://www.popsci.com/how-iss-recycles-air-and-water/

This is the truck we are building for you (we always want to make sure we have the best people and the best equipment to meet your needs and exceed your expectations).  This is our onus.

The best place to get your cars fixed and trucks built is this business:

http://coachworksautobody.com/

My founder father William Brian Boyett gets credit for establishing our fleet rotation program.  We purchase new trucks for our route delivery clients.  When the truck’s age we rotate them to our service and installation vehicles; we build a bed on the back.  The skill, technique, and precision required to build these trucks are extreme.  We work with people who care to build the right equipment so we can provide you with spectacular service.  We now build our service and installation bed so these can be rotated to another vehicle with great effort and exactly.  This is a circa 1980’s new Boyett’s family soft water delivery truck.

This is the truck we are building for you (we always want to make sure we have the best people and the best equipment to meet your needs and exceed your expectations).  This is our onus.

This truck was very well maintained and it got older.  We transformed this truck into a service and installation vehicle.

Here is a Rayne water Conditioning story.

R showed me Marjorie Mae Bleavins obituary dated Sunday, February 27, 2022

A great lady who passed in the city of Sun City Arizona with ties to our rental water treatment industry.

She made it to 90 years (born in Waukesha, Wisconsin); three of five children.  She was the first in her family to attend college, graduating with a degree in education from the University of Wisconsin (LaCrosse).  While in college, she met her first husband, Bob Falk, who had recently returned from service in Korea.  Bob persuaded Marge not only to marry him but to move across the country to Phoenix, Arizona.  Arriving in the summer of 1954 to only swamp coolers, she wondered about the wisdom of her decision.  Marge taught Physical Education at Madison Elementary #1 until the birth of her first child in 1958.  Bob and Marge had 3 children and ran their own small business (Rayne Soft Water Service) until Bob died in 1968.

It seems Bob Falk was a spectacular character in our rental soft water business.

In May 1967 Bob Falk was featured in an advertisement by Rayne Soft Water Conditioning that read REWARD:

For information leading to more Rayne Dealers like Bob Falk of Phoenix, Arizona 

Description:

Hard-working, aggressive, and personable.  Strong ambition to have a secure future, with continuing income from a franchise dealer program that gives the same monthly repeat business as a telephone company or other utility.

Modus Operandi:

Bought a franchise with 600 existing tank exchange accounts and one employee.  Today he has more than 2,600 customers and keeps 13 employees busy earning top profits for themselves and the Rayne dealer.

Accomplices

Members of Rayne Corporation team, who provided technical and management training and counsel, even help in financing.  (They’re ready to help you, too.)

Reward:

Contact Rayne, the outfit that become one of the Big Three as a complete, service-oriented water conditioning organization.  They’ll tell you how to collect your reward.

Bob was a member of the Arizona Water Quality Association

Bob is seen in this photo on the left side (the fifth man sitting).

Bob Falk was mentioned in the memorial service of David Nancarrow (founder of Rayne Water Conditioning).

A story told by Knox Williams, owner of Rayne of North San Diego:

On a return trip from Mexico with Bob Falk (the first Rayne dealer in Phoenix), Dave Nancarrow was flying his own plane and was running late in getting Bob Falk to LAX to make his connecting flight to Phoenix.  Dave called the tower and stated that he had Yul Breenner on board and would they please ask the airline to hold the flight for him.  They did and a very embarrassed Bob Falk with his very bald head and very dark glasses made the flight to Phoenix.  (For those who didn’t know Bob, he did resemble Yul Brenner in stature and doubly so with his totally hairless pate.)

All my life I heard about the great business techniques and skills of this great man Bob Falk.  He is also tied to another great story of my father’s first soft water company (beginning at Cesco).  It is the great water treatment characters that came before us that we are grateful for showing the way to my generation. 

The stories of Marjorie Mae Bleavins and Bob Falk make us stronger and give us great hope.  The lives of these two great people set the stage for the next generation of our rental water treatment industry in the Phoenix metro area of Arizona.  We feel our industry will be best by providing whole house filtration that does not utilize salt (no water waste) and does not use electricity.  It will be important for all the rental water treatment equipment to be electronically date coded and exchanged using a principle and process of indubitably exchanging the rental water equipment (we send a postcard, follow up with a phone call, send a letter and then I stop by and knock on your door ‘and leave a note to call us’).  We are destined to take action and get your rental water treatment equipment exchanged.

We share these stories to show you we care about legacy and history and to show you we have a long history of doing things the right way.  Thank you for your trust and loyalty to us.

Respectfully, Hayden Boyett

090122 10:01 AM

091522 11:42 AM update on polio virus in the water. 

Polio virus has been detected in the New York wastewater.

Our drinking water in the Phoenix Arizona area is derived from 82% recycled wastewater.

What if New York begins recycling its wastewater for drinking?

What if the polio virus finds its way into our drinking water ‘from the toilet wastewater’?

We are ready.  Based upon an email interchange with the founder of Clairify Technologies – we should have no worry that our Boyett’s family clarify RO system will remove polio virus from any wastewater ‘provided to us Phoenician Arizonians’.

Sources:

091522 email conversation with the founder of clairify technologies

https://www.cnbc.com/2022/08/19/direct-potable-reuse-why-drinking-water-could-include-recycled-sewage.html