OP
Unclebuck257
Platinum Member
gsganzer,
If I could get a truck over to your place, how much of that clay do you have piled up that you're not using as tank **** material?? Just a thought as Decatur and Denton are only 23 miles apart.
As far as using the plastic to line it's bottom and then putting a trough out for my cattle, right now he has no water well on his place and filling that trough daily would be a major chore too. Even when he gets his water well dug, the water well location is at the far end of his property, from this tank. He's eventually planning on turning this into a vinyard, and part of a new Texas Wine Industry.
Bird, that thing with the old hay bales I had never heard before. Just so happens that about a mile down the county road from me are about 200, 5 yr old round bales, just laying there and rotting away. I could have as many of them as I wanted. Interesting Bird!! I'll check that idea out. Certainly would be the least expensive way to go, but I can't see the logic as to why it would stop the tank from leaking after that old hay completely rotted away under the water!!
Other than that, the Bensonite appears to be the general solution suggested, other than digging a new tank, digging down further to more clay, or getting a few truck loads of clay from gsganzer in Denton and spreading it out on the bottom and sides.
I sure appreciate all the responses.
If I could get a truck over to your place, how much of that clay do you have piled up that you're not using as tank **** material?? Just a thought as Decatur and Denton are only 23 miles apart.
As far as using the plastic to line it's bottom and then putting a trough out for my cattle, right now he has no water well on his place and filling that trough daily would be a major chore too. Even when he gets his water well dug, the water well location is at the far end of his property, from this tank. He's eventually planning on turning this into a vinyard, and part of a new Texas Wine Industry.
Bird, that thing with the old hay bales I had never heard before. Just so happens that about a mile down the county road from me are about 200, 5 yr old round bales, just laying there and rotting away. I could have as many of them as I wanted. Interesting Bird!! I'll check that idea out. Certainly would be the least expensive way to go, but I can't see the logic as to why it would stop the tank from leaking after that old hay completely rotted away under the water!!
Other than that, the Bensonite appears to be the general solution suggested, other than digging a new tank, digging down further to more clay, or getting a few truck loads of clay from gsganzer in Denton and spreading it out on the bottom and sides.
I sure appreciate all the responses.