In most cities, you can't put in a well. In rural areas, yes people have wells, but many would like to have city water.Does anybody out there avoid meters by putting a well in, or is water too deep to drill a well. Around here everybody out of town has a well.
A few have them in the city but annual backflow testing required and they were often put in many decades ago.Does anybody out there avoid meters by putting a well in, or is water too deep to drill a well. Around here everybody out of town has a well.
After watching a Project Farm review, I bought a Zerowater dispenser. It works! The well water tests well within municipal water specs except just within the upper limit for acidity. The filter's element should be replaced when ppm of Total Dissolved Solids exceeds 35. (It comes with a ppm tester). I changed the element after a year even though the raw and filtered water continue to test 0 ppm - compared to just under 50 ppm for municipal at home in town. Recommended!Now that we live in the county, we have a well. We're lucky that it's pretty good here, too. Out on our rural property, it has a lot of iron.
Yea, I was thinking about that damage as I viewed the vid.That's the spillway that failed 6 years ago and washed a lot of the hillside down, plugging the river below.
The article notes that this present release has dropped the reservoir level less than a foot. And it's interesting that the volume in the spillway is 1/3 of the total release, the other 2/3 is going through the powerhouse.
I'm 70 miles downstream from there and it's been raining extremely hard, with winds that might be making new records. I'm not aware of any crises here like we read about in southern California, however.