LouNY
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Jul 4, 2015
- Messages
- 12,260
- Location
- Greenwich, NY
- Tractor
- Branson 8050, IH 574, Oliver 1550 Diesel Utility (traded in on Branson) NH 8160. Kioti CK2620SECH
Wow, I've created a monster! OR is it a serpent?
As mentioned previously the water comes out of the ledge in 3 places, although I'm sure that surface water may get in at certain times. She has an ultraviolet sterilizer and had the water tested this spring. With an 8x12 foot concrete enclosure, a varmint proof cover is going to be a little work, but doable. The snakes most likely get up on the concrete to sun themselves, fall in and can't get out. I can pump it dry, get in there and clean it out; I just don't know how well I can clean up partially decomposed carcasses which have seeped into the crushed stone. I will have somebody around when I do so, as the last thing I need is to fall off the ladder when getting back out and have it fill back up with 10 feet of water again.
Then she would have to buy even more bleach… :laughing:
I've been pushing her to drill a well for several years now, but my parents were always frugal and what they have worked. Reality is that she won't be there many more years, and the property will likely be sold and subdivided when she's done with it.
When you are pumping the water out use the outlet of your pump to churn up the sediment then suck it out to discharge, as it refills churn it some more and using your pump suck it out repeat till clean.
As far as keeping the snakes and other critters out cut and clear any vegetation for a 3-4 swath and spray it to keep it from regrowing.
And this will get a lot of people going, but just a bit of diesel fuel misted around will stop most snakes from entering.
Get a good tight cover on and tar up all the seams.
As far as drilled wells being better then dug because dug wells draw from shallow water, all water comes from the surface one place or another.
My drilled well that is below bedrock artesians most years how much and how fast depends on the weather from 3-5 years ago.