Property with a well and septic tank.?
As we search for a home we have shyed away from those outside the city limits with well and septic tank. Tell us the reasons for and against such a property. Thanks,
As we search for a home we have shyed away from those outside the city limits with well and septic tank. Tell us the reasons for and against such a property. Thanks,
Artemisc
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I have both, and a sand mound, as the soil is heavy in clay, so you need a sand mound connected to the septic tank. One of the downsides is we can't have a garbage disposal. The holding tank has to be pumped every 2 years ($250), and we've had to get the pump fixed twice. There was a break in one of the pipe leading to the sand mound, and they had to get a little backhoe in to excavate to find and hix it. So I've probably put out $3500 in the 20 years I've lived here.
On the plus side, I have no water or sewer bills. When the house was first built, I had a water filter company test my water, but I didn't tell them if I had a filtration system (I don't). The water was of such high quality the filter guy incorrectly guessed I had a system. So we have fantastic water, right out of the tap.
Everyone in my neighborhood has a well, holding tank and sand mound. The closest town is slowly expanding their public water and sewer system, but I can't see it getting to my area for decades.
Bottom line, I'm fine with it.
garry
firstly try gypsum in the clay soil , and modify your septic system so it feeds the garden than collecting it for disposal . septic tanks collect manure , why bot feed your plants with it ..modern septic systems recycle most the waste to feed plants and gypsum breaks up the clay to smaller pieces .
oil field trash
There are several things to consider when looking at a house with a well and septic tank.
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All jurisdictions require specific spacing between the well and the septic tank. The septic system has to be designed based on the expected load that will be generated by the house. Bed rooms is a common based for a design. The care and maintenance of the well and septic system is the other consideration.
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If you decided to purchase a specific house you can have the well tested for both capacity and quality of the water. The condition of the septic system can also be evaluated prior to purchase.
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I would not shy away from a house just because of these two systems.
Christin K
There is no reason to shy away from the septic tank OR the well. A well-maintained septic system is every bit as good as one connected to city services, and may even be better. A house with a water well needs to be tested before you buy--that's easy enough. Just make sure your seller has maintained records on tests, pumping, and any maintenance they've done before buying. You ask for this information from the agent or seller.
You can also have it tested yourself.
Karen L
There is no reason to shy away from either one. True, you may have to think a little about how you use both of them instead of mindlessly running water all day or tossing things down the toilet that really shouldn't go there even in a municipal sewer, but once you know what to do and not do, it's easy.
Having a well for the last 13 years has worked out much cheaper for me. I had a new deep well, pump, water line, and pressure tank put in in 2007, that was $10,000. $8,000 was for drilling the hole; that is an expense I should never have again. The bills for the rural water system I was on before, for the same period, would have been $18,200 even if they hadn't raised the rates in the meantime.
I prefer being on a well. No one can tell me I can only water my garden or wash my car on Tuesday, Friday, and Sunday all summer. If I run the well dry, that's my problem. And I like the water better than the system I was on before. If the power goes out I can't run the water because I don't have a generator, but so far that has only been an occasional and very temporary event. I keep a little water stored so I can at least flush the toilet a few times.
Septic systems require occasional pumping out. If you do the right things with it, that won't need to happen often and it isn't expensive anyway . Many people treat toilets and drains as all-purpose disposals. They are not. If you mistreat your septic system by putting the wrong things in it, it will cost you directly out of your pocket to deal with it instead of the costs of it coming out of a general municipal budget.
If you get serious enough to make an offer on a property with a septic system, make it a condition of the sale that the system be inspected by a pro and that you're happy with its condition. It wouldn't hurt to do the same for the well, or at least find out how deep it is, its rate of flow, and if the water is drinkable.