|
Re: How's your drinking water?
[Re: Dan Barnhurst]
#8259256
11/11/24 02:10 AM
11/11/24 02:10 AM
|
Joined: Dec 2006
Oregon
beaverpeeler
trapper
|
trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
Oregon
|
If I were you I would have the water tested just to be sure. I've lived on well water my whole life except my college years where the water was so heavily chlorinated it was hard to drink.
I test our well every year for bacteria and once did a complete analysis including nitrates and arsenic. We were good all the way around. Our water from a 110' deep well is the best and has never tested positive for bacteria.
My fear of moving stairs is escalating!
|
|
|
Re: How's your drinking water?
[Re: Dan Barnhurst]
#8259260
11/11/24 03:19 AM
11/11/24 03:19 AM
|
Joined: Dec 2006
Central Pennsylvania
Nittany Lion
Don't call me Mister, Mister
|
Don't call me Mister, Mister
Joined: Dec 2006
Central Pennsylvania
|
Well water, I drink a good bit of water, I like to fill a glass with ice cubes and top it off with water.
I got myself a seniors' GPS. Not only does it tell me how to get to my destination, it tells me why I wanted to go there.
|
|
|
Re: How's your drinking water?
[Re: Dan Barnhurst]
#8259270
11/11/24 04:09 AM
11/11/24 04:09 AM
|
Joined: May 2016
Southern Illinois
Foxpaw
trapper
|
trapper
Joined: May 2016
Southern Illinois
|
Been drinking the same soft spring water over 70 yrs. Attended a church where a small village had drilled a deep well for their water. It was as hard as nails. An electric coffee pot would only last a few months before the minerals would clog it. 8 people out of a congregation of about 40 had kidney stones. The whole village was plagued with kidney stones. A guy made a killing installing water softeners. Finally they got hooked on to a bigger water district that was from a lake. They still have to deal with the chlorine and fluoride and farm chemicals.
A lot of concern with fracking especially around fault areas where the chemicals can migrate into aquifers.
Last edited by Foxpaw; 11/11/24 04:25 AM.
|
|
|
Re: How's your drinking water?
[Re: Dan Barnhurst]
#8259282
11/11/24 05:37 AM
11/11/24 05:37 AM
|
Joined: Mar 2020
W NY
Turtledale
trapper
|
trapper
Joined: Mar 2020
W NY
|
Me and the Mrs. are on a well but she doesn't like the slight sulfur taste of our well. So we go to the artisan well about 10 miles away and get two five gallon carboys of water every other month. She uses it for what she drinks and I still drink the well water.
NYSTA, NTA, FTA, life member Erie county trappers assn.,life member Catt.county trappers
|
|
|
Re: How's your drinking water?
[Re: Dan Barnhurst]
#8259308
11/11/24 07:03 AM
11/11/24 07:03 AM
|
Joined: Dec 2006
Western Michigan
Animals Only
trapper
|
trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
Western Michigan
|
Well water here. Hard iron and smells of rotten egg. Water softener gets rid of the iron but not the smell. We are going to have another filter added to get the smell out.
AKA: Rusty Shackleford
|
|
|
Re: How's your drinking water?
[Re: Dan Barnhurst]
#8259327
11/11/24 07:44 AM
11/11/24 07:44 AM
|
Joined: Dec 2006
SEPA
Lugnut
trapper
|
trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
SEPA
|
Our old camp was spring water only, had to go to the local spring and fill up the old, metal milk jugs then dump them into an elevated holding tank that gravity-fed the kitchen and half-bath sinks. I remember one year having to build a series of small fires under the spring pipe to thaw it.
I have a shallow well (about 40") at camp. The water is good but in drought conditions (like now) we try to conserve by supplementing from the spring about a mile down the dirt road.
I have a deep, 310' well at home. We test the water occasionally and it is good although it contains some iron. I also have a spring that feeds a pond on my home property. I'm trying to figure out how to plump it to my new fur shed/summer kitchen.
Eh...wot?
|
|
|
|
|
|