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Treating your well #99508
08/19/2008 03:07 PM
08/19/2008 03:07 PM
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Hawk78 Offline OP
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For those of you with wells, you know that sometimes they need treating for the water to be safe. Especially for consumption by kids and the elderly. In the situation where the Culligan Man may not be available to do so, and you may have nobody to test your water anyway, you may want to treat it on your own. The chemicals (chlorine?) to do so are available to treat your well, and should only cost $10-15 per treatment. My local bottled-water place sells it, so I only assume yours does too.


Just do what is right because it is what is right. I think it's that simple.
Re: Treating your well #99509
08/20/2008 12:00 AM
08/20/2008 12:00 AM
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Somewhere in the woods
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oneshotK57 Offline
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Won't bottled Bleach do the same thing?


Old Farts Explode, not Burn
Re: Treating your well #99510
08/20/2008 01:27 AM
08/20/2008 01:27 AM
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Hawk78 Offline OP
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You know it might, but I'm not an expert on this sort of thing. The stuff comes in a little plastic container in pellet form sealed tight, so it looked like it would last a long time. I kind of figured for the $12 it would just be worth it to buy the stuff.


Just do what is right because it is what is right. I think it's that simple.
Re: Treating your well #99511
08/20/2008 03:27 AM
08/20/2008 03:27 AM
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Have a sample of your well water tested BEFORE you drop liguid bleach into the well. The company that I used to work for did that and ended up with more problems than before.


Rudy out
"Once the pin is pulled, Mr. Handgrenade is no longer our friend."
Re: Treating your well #99512
09/02/2008 10:25 AM
09/02/2008 10:25 AM
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North Force Offline
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Wouldn't you be better of treating After it comes out of the well?

I think you would be wiser to get a good filtration system (UV), instead of maybe ruining a whole well system.


"To achieve One World Government it is necessary to remove from the minds of men their individualism, their loyalty to family traditions and national identification."
~ Brock Chisholm, when director of UN World Health Organization
Re: Treating your well #99513
09/02/2008 12:17 PM
09/02/2008 12:17 PM
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The Greywolf Offline
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Man, I have to agree with North Force, My well goes into a giant underground lake, millions of gallons of water. It seems to me even a small well that is in the rocks that only produces 3 or 4 gallons a minute, still better to treat water after drawn. Unless your problem is a dead animal, or feces in the casing itself. I'd treat the water after you pump it. If your problem is the later, then you'll have to treat it in ground. Maybe your well are different then mine. I can treat a problem in the casing, but would be wasting my time trying to treat the aquifer.


I believe in absolute Freedom, as little interference from any government as possible...And I'll fight any man trying to take that away from me.

Jimmy Greywolf
Re: Treating your well #99514
09/02/2008 01:45 PM
09/02/2008 01:45 PM
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Hawk78 Offline OP
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The most common problem is coliform in the well casing itself if I understand correctly. The water is fine, the contamination occurs from contact with bacteria built up in the casing. Full-spectrum testing kits can be had for about $25.


Just do what is right because it is what is right. I think it's that simple.
Re: Treating your well #99515
09/02/2008 02:07 PM
09/02/2008 02:07 PM
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Hawk78 Offline OP
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This is a comprehensive write-up. Good read. Well disinfection procedures


Just do what is right because it is what is right. I think it's that simple.
Re: Treating your well #99516
09/02/2008 04:15 PM
09/02/2008 04:15 PM
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North Force Offline
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So if i understand that info - you only want to treat/kill the stuff that is in your "Water Pipe" in the well, not the well it self.


"To achieve One World Government it is necessary to remove from the minds of men their individualism, their loyalty to family traditions and national identification."
~ Brock Chisholm, when director of UN World Health Organization
Re: Treating your well #99517
09/02/2008 05:03 PM
09/02/2008 05:03 PM
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Hawk78 Offline OP
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Yup, it's not possible to treat the groundwater. If you have a problem with the actual water, you have no choice but to treat it above ground. Most common groundwater contaminants are nitrates, pesticides, and heavy metals. In the city the most common contaminant would be fluoride.
If your well water tests good it should theoretically stay good barring no major changes to your area like new livestock farms or flooding. Talking about the actual groundwater now, not the well piping. That being said the safest way would be to treat all of the water that came out of it. CDC recommends testing at least once per year. Best in our situation to be prepared to test and treat it I suppose, for when things go south.


Just do what is right because it is what is right. I think it's that simple.
Re: Treating your well #99518
09/02/2008 05:09 PM
09/02/2008 05:09 PM
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Hawk78 Offline OP
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Now to find a good filtration and UV purification combo that can be run without electricity and can treat mass amounts of water.


Just do what is right because it is what is right. I think it's that simple.
Re: Treating your well #99519
09/03/2008 12:42 PM
09/03/2008 12:42 PM
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The Greywolf Offline
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Also you should insure that your well is at least 200 feet from any septic system or animal corral and pens...A lot of people are that far from their own septic but the new neighbor septic can intrude in that space. Hey 200 feet is the legal min. here I would want to be a lot farther.


I believe in absolute Freedom, as little interference from any government as possible...And I'll fight any man trying to take that away from me.

Jimmy Greywolf

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