Oh No!!! We found several issues pumping out the old well. Part 2 of the sprinkler pump build

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  • Опубліковано 6 вер 2024
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 201

  • @tomfarley3924
    @tomfarley3924 Рік тому +87

    You might try to rent a trash pump to remove the sediment. There could be quite a bit of build up after all these years. It would also help with recovery time. I hope it all works out for you.

    • @eagle2019
      @eagle2019 Рік тому +9

      I was going to suggest the same thing. You probably have a lot of silt in the bottom

    • @kd5inm
      @kd5inm Рік тому +4

      I was thinking the same thing. Suck up all that sediment and flush it out.

    • @cathydickerson1420
      @cathydickerson1420 Рік тому +2

      That looks snaky

    • @kern123
      @kern123 Рік тому +5

      Or maybe even auger it out with a sign company type large auger…. Or have a well service bale it to get the sediment out. Aren’t those type wells usually down to bedrock? It may rejuvenate that spring,

    • @trophyfishn9757
      @trophyfishn9757 Рік тому +5

      2 in trash pump new at harbor freight is about $250. They work great.

  • @cutlow1383
    @cutlow1383 Рік тому +33

    Why not use the well with a small volume float protected pump (sump pump) sending water into a holding tank that once filled could provide the volume needed for your projects. Would provide a grid down water source as well.

    • @droac3
      @droac3 Рік тому +1

      An EBay special solar pump could be an idea too. Cheap and work well. Pump into a tank. Well recovery time will be interesting to see.

  • @thomasgreene5750
    @thomasgreene5750 Рік тому +26

    Once you get the old building out of the way, you might consider extending the well deeper to improve storage and flow rate. A submersible pump would reduce freezing risk. Finally, an external water-storage cistern of a large size would allow you to collect water graduallly from the well and deliver it at higher short-term rates for irrigation and similar uses.

  • @batpherlangkharkrang7976
    @batpherlangkharkrang7976 Місяць тому

    Hi.... Evan and Rebecca thanks you for showing your video homestead bye 👋 bye 👋 bye 👋 bye 👋👍👍👍

  • @4knanapapa
    @4knanapapa Рік тому +11

    Every since you first showed that well I've been wondering if it would be useable glad to see you giving it a shot.

  • @pops4638
    @pops4638 Рік тому +14

    Evan if you use a funnel to fill your system it will go faster. You want to fill the whole piping system from check valve to top where the funnel is.
    Also get a septic tank truck that uses a vacuume pump to sucksune all the sand and silt from your well. The refill will astonish you.
    Good Luck old Pops

  • @krickette5569
    @krickette5569 Рік тому +4

    Small children would be a concern as far as that well/well house goes. Glad you got it all cleaned out and have another water source, always a good thing.

  • @jeffreymorrison6084
    @jeffreymorrison6084 27 днів тому

    great video. Also liked Part1. Learned alot. Thanks.

  • @BillTheTractorMan
    @BillTheTractorMan Рік тому +10

    We had an old well on my grandpas farm like that, it was a silo type hole made of concrete and block with a shelter over the top. I think it was about 15-20ft deep. It was dug in by my great Greandpa in the 1930's, and did well until the 1950's went the first electricity was ran to the area. Grandpas dad put in a much deeper well and an electric pump at the time for the house. They used the pit well for livestock and the garden until the 90's when Great grandma was too elderly to garden and the livestock were gone. In 2011 we opened it back up, and put a gas trash pump on it to irrigate with. We used it fo a couple weeks and it just never really recovered. There used to be a spring that kept part of the farm a pond and even that dried up. We think it had to due with all the urbanization to the south of the farm 3miles and the irrigation pivots in the area pumping off the aquifer. In the spring there was plenty of water to pump the pit, but by July, August it was dry.

  • @jahn9960
    @jahn9960 Рік тому +2

    A 500gal holding tank will be the best bet. That way the well can recover and you still have water to use.

  • @jayfromtexas6718
    @jayfromtexas6718 Рік тому

    That well is definitely worth fixing.

  • @edwardbusby9402
    @edwardbusby9402 Рік тому

    Ivan you may have two drill more holes but you may try rapping the pipe with screen wire to help filter the water and it may help the small screen from pluging up

  • @157-40_T
    @157-40_T Рік тому +2

    Braver man that most!

    • @rt3box6tx74
      @rt3box6tx74 Рік тому +1

      Yes!🤢🤮 I would have been gagging. 😄

  • @groomfamilyfarm
    @groomfamilyfarm Рік тому

    If the well is on a good spring you should have plenty of water. My grandmothers well is only 4 feet deep and fed the house and barn and irrigated all the gardens.

  • @samuelhitchcock8547
    @samuelhitchcock8547 Рік тому +1

    Awesome videos! Something that might work for you too is a ram pump off the overflow drop of your pond and into a storage tank in the barn that can then feed the water tariffs for your animals. A ram pump doesn't use electricity or power and works off the pressure built from a drop of elevation of the water. You can you tube some videos on them but then with your float systems in the water tanks you'd never have to worry about water or using fuel or electricity to get water to the animals

  • @DustyMeadowRanch
    @DustyMeadowRanch Рік тому

    I sure hope this old well wasn't the problem with your cow Lucy. Listeria is known to be problemadic in water and wells and old storage tanks.

  • @upnorth1955
    @upnorth1955 Рік тому +2

    Love what you do and the information you provide!

  • @SFCRambo60
    @SFCRambo60 Рік тому +2

    I would take a inner tube and put on the end of your pump pickup so you have it floating and not touching the bottom of the pond. If you worry about it floating back to shore than tie a rope to it and some type of anchor ⚓. Enjoy your channel.

    • @SFCRambo60
      @SFCRambo60 Рік тому

      I use an inner tube on my live fish basket, that way I just let it float beside where ever I am fishing. So just get a small inner tube and put it on than put a larger inner tube below the one small one that is tight on your tubing.

  • @teenagefarmer
    @teenagefarmer Рік тому +4

    Very cool, glad to see you were able to get a better look at that Old well. I am very surprised that it isn't deeper. Great video keep it up

  • @rt3box6tx74
    @rt3box6tx74 Рік тому +2

    The springs flow rate should improve with use. Being dormant for years silt may have backed up and obstructed its flow. Constant pumping might reverse that. Is there a sign of a spillway around the outside of the building where excess water was meant to run off to a pond or creek? Silt buildup will require air pressure or vacuum to dislodge.
    Engineer775 channel might have some info that would help. There's also a youtoober channel *h2o mechanic* who works on domestic wells.
    If it was mine I'd put in a very low flow rate pump with an auto off switch for when (if) it runs dry.
    I have my deep irrigation wells flushed with water under air pressure which blasts the fine sand and gravel away from the steel well casing's slits. Those slits will rust up and globs of rust fill the slits too. After a tune up the flow rate improves significantly, but these are wells that pump 750-950 gpm anyway. In the 1950s - 60s when originally drilled they pumped 12-1500 gpm.
    Times like this is when you need input of pioneers who dealt with developing springs. I've always been curious on that topic. Springs were rare in my region, but there were some in places where the water table was shallow. We have towns named after the springs in this area. Springlake, Shallowater, Buffalo Springs Lake, etc. 🍀

  • @oxfletch
    @oxfletch Рік тому +1

    Now I know how to build an effective groundhog trap.

    • @rt3box6tx74
      @rt3box6tx74 Рік тому

      🏅🏆🥇comment of the day!😆

  • @chaunceypullman3380
    @chaunceypullman3380 Рік тому +1

    I know exactly what you're talking about Evan. My Grandma's place was like that when I was a little tot. It was more than 7 homes all using the same well. Boy, flushing the toilet was a chore. Back then we still had the Ole washing machine that stayed outside and had those rolling pins to squeeze the water out. Talking about a task and a half to wash clothes for 10 people. Now, if I was you, invest in new building. Pre fab used shed will work fine. Just insulate it for your cold climate and solar panel for its own usage. That's what I did at my place. Haven't had a problem yet.

  • @007darryl
    @007darryl Рік тому

    Hey brother,
    Why not have the old well pump into a large water tank.
    Then you can use the water from the tank for whatever you want.

  • @jackwhite6030
    @jackwhite6030 5 місяців тому

    I have four tanks to draw off of but I have artesian to fill them up. Irrigation really pulls a lot of water fast.

  • @marthabartel604
    @marthabartel604 Рік тому

    Get a disinfectant everywhere out scrub the well, pump out to clear. Then, hit that wall with your 🚜 ground level d test well for pure after flushing and in-line filters the start installed 12x10 shed, with solar on top. Do it right, and water sprites on outside or small water over flow drip for animals.

  • @trwsandford
    @trwsandford Рік тому +5

    Ethan, the more you cycle that well.. the faster it will refill.

    • @elbertfreeman8124
      @elbertfreeman8124 Рік тому +1

      I agree, a float set near the top level along with a latching timer/relay. could bring back and drastically increase flow of well.

    • @trwsandford
      @trwsandford Рік тому

      @@elbertfreeman8124 exactly! no need to do all of your irrigation in 1 hour. have it powered by the sun, and irrigate when full!

  • @mga7649
    @mga7649 Рік тому

    Go down in the well and clean it out. A post hole digger works great.

  • @cajunnathan4586
    @cajunnathan4586 Рік тому

    Alls Good!

  • @farmyourbackyard2023
    @farmyourbackyard2023 Рік тому +3

    Two things. The well might have recharged more quickly in previous years. Adding swales uphill from the well will help sink water. There are other things you can do as well, like putting a storage tank beside the well for extra holding capacity while it recharges. Second, I just finished reopening a well on my farm, and put a metal cap on top of the well with a hatch. I plan to add the pump house as soon as I work out the solar set up I want to use for the well and the pump. Thanks for showing the process of using your pump with the solar generator. I plan to do the same until I have my full solar set up out there.

  • @setholson6550
    @setholson6550 Рік тому

    I expected a snake to fall on you or step on it at any moment. Hope you figure it out and get the amount of water that helps. Good video. Susan

  • @paulgagnon7153
    @paulgagnon7153 Рік тому

    you need to dig it out to open the spring up!!!

  • @eberntson
    @eberntson Рік тому

    That silt may be hiding a lot of depth in the well. If you clean the well out, you may find a lot more capacity. No one has a well that is only 60" deep, 8 feet, maybe. A well-house doesn't need much space; it has some hose, some electrics, a pump, and a tank. Keep working at it.

  • @markpriddy1
    @markpriddy1 Рік тому

    Love free water. 😎

  • @loganh6736
    @loganh6736 Рік тому

    To get the wood out use a three hook fishing lure then put your metal magnet down there on a rope to get any metal out. If you have a company that has a hydro vac truck that does horizontal drilling see what it would cost to clean all the sediment out some well drills may have that equipment. But first see what your recharge rate is. There is a old saying when you have to conserve water If it’s yellow let it mellow if it’s brown flush it down

  • @randybutler4772
    @randybutler4772 Рік тому

    Kinda gross! Good luck w/ saving that well. Thank you for sharing.

  • @martihetrick609
    @martihetrick609 Рік тому

    Till you get stuff use wire on the top to get critters out and now door

  • @thematthatter1
    @thematthatter1 Рік тому

    i like what you do man.....could always bring a tote of water and a pump and flush out from top by running line to bottom.....like jetting a well...ive jettet many a railroad tie and dock pylings from irrigation pumps, pressure washers etc....the power of water impressive....about to jet own irrigation well here in fl.

  • @elbertfreeman8124
    @elbertfreeman8124 Рік тому +1

    You have my admiration. I have removed cats, rat's and possums from on wanted locations. It was news to me; our nose is a chemical receptor. So, if you smell it you actually in contact with the corpse! Gross! Put an ample amount of Mentholatum under the nose and in my case up the nostrils helps but by little.

  • @davidzemke2549
    @davidzemke2549 Рік тому +1

    Nice job. A solar pump with a larger reservoir may be a option until winter... looks like a few + thousands in costs. Appreciate your video.

  • @stevemench786
    @stevemench786 Рік тому

    You may want to get that old building out of the way and drive a point down for a more consistent water flow.

  • @ThePenn7
    @ThePenn7 Рік тому +1

    you need a dedicated solar panel and inverter to power the pump.

  • @joannak4640
    @joannak4640 Рік тому +5

    Shoot. That's too bad...I know that well has been on your mind since you bought the place. Good for you for trying and figuring some stuff out about it 👍 You'll have to let us know how much the pond irrigation for the garden offsets your water bill come fall/winter

  • @JamesCouch777
    @JamesCouch777 Рік тому

    Send a kid down in the well to clean it out. I cleaned out several when I was growing up.😁

  • @patrickmoore1602
    @patrickmoore1602 Рік тому

    Oh boy, that was great . Just sat down to eat dinner .. thinking I should pause this . Of course came back to finish watching .
    Always enjoy the videos Evan, thanks from CT.!

  • @arlodewald5378
    @arlodewald5378 Рік тому +1

    Some times wells sills in when they are not use on a regular basis . When some wells are first drilled they can produce more water over a period of a few hours or even a day or so . Most wells will be dirty with silt than clear up as they are pumped for a while .

  • @chartlook1
    @chartlook1 Рік тому +1

    Sometimes a well will return to max capacity after it's worked. I'd try using it for a week or so to see if the recovery improves over time.

  • @rkthing55
    @rkthing55 Рік тому

    "Lassie...Timmy fell in the well. Get help! LOL

  • @roberthuckeby2825
    @roberthuckeby2825 Рік тому +3

    Sorry the well house didn't work out, but you still have the pond as an excellent source for irrigation. Will be interesting to see what happens to the water level in the pond if you irrigate for several hours at a time

  • @Iamkcs2c
    @Iamkcs2c Рік тому +1

    1:04 Man I believe you when you say that is nasty and "where are youtube censors when you need them" XD

  • @thewalkingdad68
    @thewalkingdad68 Рік тому +3

    You might want to run some bleach water through that pump before you water the garden again. That water might contaminate the veggies you're growing if you don't do that. Just wanted to put that out there.
    P.S.: great job on at least trying on the old well. Was wondering if you would come back and actually investigate it after you showed it a long time ago. 👍

  • @BH-by5ky
    @BH-by5ky Рік тому +2

    Good start on refurbishing the old well. Be interesting to discover how deep the sediment has become over the years. Once the building is out of the way, clearing the sediment and maybe extending the depth might be a partial solution. As others have mentioned a surge tank to store water would help even out recovery rate, the only issue being winter time freezing. I expect it’s a bit more of a project than originally envisioned.

  • @SwannOG
    @SwannOG Рік тому

    Get yourself some plastic water tanks and pump into them for use in irrigation

  • @olddawgdreaming5715
    @olddawgdreaming5715 Рік тому

    Too bad about the well problems Evan. We know you'll stay safe with the testing of the water after you decide what you'll do with it. Keep up the great work around there. OLD DAWG DREAMING Fred.

  • @corydriver7634
    @corydriver7634 Рік тому

    Pumping contaminated water out of a shallow spring fed well -right back onto the well site is probably counter productive. As far as well capacity goes there probably was a sand point in there at one time.

  • @annettenewton6240
    @annettenewton6240 Рік тому +2

    But back in the day it might have fed 3 homes, because they didn’t use water in that time like us. Probably only had running water at a kitchen sink. There would not have been a bathroom in the house either.

    • @solarcows
      @solarcows Рік тому +1

      My grandparent's house was much like that. The water supply was a rainwater cistern in the cellar that fed the kitchen sink and a bathroom. The tub was only filled once a week and everyone took their turn bathing.

  • @charlesletterman6245
    @charlesletterman6245 Рік тому

    Sounds like an exciting project in building a new well house.
    I know whatever you come up with it'll turn out great.

  • @kennethlowe6337
    @kennethlowe6337 Рік тому

    You could try having a well company come out and frack it.

  • @michaelraby7043
    @michaelraby7043 Рік тому

    You could think about using a 2-3k gallon tank with a float system to keep the tank full and use that as your water source for watering plants and animals.

  • @EngineersHomestead
    @EngineersHomestead Рік тому +1

    When we had our main water line replaced, we pulled up a 6' diameter concrete disk. It was 8" thick and to our surpise had a rock lined old well underneath with clear water probably 15' down...perhaps at the level of a nearby pond probably 60' away. You could see old pipes poking in and a couple spray cans from who knows what decade floating inside. The well is very close to a septic field or id consider using it for something. Luckily we have city water despite being in country.

  • @michaelchamberlain4618
    @michaelchamberlain4618 Рік тому

    The well is a lot deeper but sediment is in there You have to remove it.

  • @Void_And_Absent
    @Void_And_Absent Рік тому

    You need a well company to come in, and start again.

  • @terrycastor8299
    @terrycastor8299 Рік тому

    Best laid plans...
    Hang in there, Evan!

  • @theodorewilson399
    @theodorewilson399 Рік тому

    Brother, you might consider "rinsing out" your pump and hose w/a little bleach water before using it for something else, i.e. watering animals, etc. : )

  • @Andrew82688
    @Andrew82688 Рік тому

    If the well can’t keep up run a float switch or timer.

  • @scottparker8425
    @scottparker8425 Рік тому +3

    I can smell those dead groundhogs through my monitor...

    • @rt3box6tx74
      @rt3box6tx74 Рік тому

      I lost my sense of smell in late March due to a certain *virus*. I've tackled many stinky jobs since I recovered, but I have to hurry - it's coming back. I smelled vinegar the other day. 😳

  • @michelehumann811
    @michelehumann811 Рік тому

    oh boy another project we get to watch you do

  • @gavinhowell2833
    @gavinhowell2833 Рік тому

    I am not grossed out I do that all the time

  • @Dan-qy1rg
    @Dan-qy1rg Рік тому +1

    Nice video, I think the well is good to use for the water troughs, like you said. It looked pretty clean to me, albeit the groundhogs contaminated it, you can still clean that up along with the sand and debris. Good luck on it, hope you have a nice weekend.

  • @edadpops1709
    @edadpops1709 Рік тому

    Hey man try a long neck funnel to prime that pump

  • @philswords6390
    @philswords6390 Рік тому +1

    Water maybe 10 feet or 110 feet?
    Deep well likely uses 240 volts?
    Quick draw may be in shallow part of well. Deeper you go more water.
    Good luck.

  • @ianhaggart1438
    @ianhaggart1438 Рік тому +1

    Joys of exploring old Wells 😅... you could always fit a submersible pump with float switch down there and fill a tank on the surface to do your irrigation job with.. just an idea . Stay safe 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

  • @gkenn99
    @gkenn99 Рік тому

    If you had a tote (4x4x4 water tank) and used it as a storage tank, you could irrigate and the well could slowly fill the tank after you're done.

  • @davidkraft3690
    @davidkraft3690 Рік тому

    Love your experiments. Thanks for taking us along,

  • @johnnester2340
    @johnnester2340 Рік тому

    Add a tank/reservoir for storage. We use to water cattle off shallow well with a windmill that pumped into a reservoir that in turn filled two cattle troughs. That would give you extra capacity to smooth out supply/demand.

  • @bwlyon
    @bwlyon Рік тому +1

    It would be interesting to hear what the recovery rate of the well. Even if it won’t flow enough to irrigate the pasture spring the ability to water the animals is good. Can’t wait to hear the final verdict.

  • @lorineidtinytoadplot744
    @lorineidtinytoadplot744 Рік тому

    I turned this on and then turned it off again really quick lol. I was eating dinner when I turned it on the frost time. 🤢

  • @jeremycraddock4108
    @jeremycraddock4108 Рік тому

    I agree with them saying get a pump truck to come clean out the bottom and see if it increases the flow.

  • @miguelavelasquez8056
    @miguelavelasquez8056 Рік тому

    Hay Evan cool to see you are maybe rebuilding your wellhouse can't wait to see you you come up with regarding your well im sure it. will be done right thanks for sharing

  • @vikinghog
    @vikinghog Рік тому

    You need a funnel to help prime the pump instead of trying to pour water in that small opening.

  • @johnzink3309
    @johnzink3309 4 місяці тому

    thx

  • @racsoga
    @racsoga Рік тому +1

    I love your content!

  • @markhudspeth8503
    @markhudspeth8503 Рік тому

    Stock tank water heaters in the winter are exspenive to run. Research.

  • @jamesmorrison1884
    @jamesmorrison1884 Рік тому

    Hello Evan looks like nice well house. Dont think need larger in my opinion it looks like it would work great. Hope you get a cover on it to stop any more drowning. Nice job have a great day

  • @ericwilkinson1771
    @ericwilkinson1771 Рік тому

    sorry missed the old tractor to be fixed

  • @terrypomatto907
    @terrypomatto907 Рік тому

    A cover is the way to go. It is difficult to keep a pump house from freezing up in the winter. We battled the problem for twenty years before we got county water system. Good luck with the decision that you end up with.

  • @howdyshaun6139
    @howdyshaun6139 Рік тому +1

    You could always use a header tank and pump into that to use for irrigation on that side? Or it might even be worth getting someone to refurbish the well if its already there, water is obviously high enough for it to be cheap.

  • @allenferry9632
    @allenferry9632 Рік тому +1

    Bummer video. I wonder if it would be worth while to hook a garden hose up to the pump and pvc pipe tothe outlet and try jetting the bottom of the well just to see how much silt is in there. Maybe the silt is acting as a seal slowing the recovery.

    • @rt3box6tx74
      @rt3box6tx74 Рік тому

      That's my thought. I was wondering if a shop vac would be capable of removing the silt. A smaller diameter hose would need to be rigged up, but the silt needs to go somehow.

  • @FloydBlack-xi8fh
    @FloydBlack-xi8fh Рік тому

    I agree with Tom Farley. Try to deepen the well a little more. Also I wish u good luck with the well house project

  • @gcranch9913
    @gcranch9913 Рік тому

    If the well is weak think about filling a large storage tank or cistern to accommodate needs

  • @georgewallacejr5644
    @georgewallacejr5644 Рік тому

    Hello y’all I would try this when you rebuild the well house put a150 or 200gallon storage tank and pressure tank and a pump with a long float on the pump. Where the water get low it will cut off Have a bless day like y’all video s. 👍👍👍🙏🏻🇺🇸

  • @stuartsplace100
    @stuartsplace100 Рік тому

    Hi Evan,like the vid,it was awesome,like your sprinkler pump,seams to work well

  • @LFfire1597
    @LFfire1597 Рік тому

    How about building a small pump house next to the pond? Drive a small water pit lined with 5 gallon buckets with the bottoms cut off and dropping the suction pipe down inside that?

  • @richardlancaster8303
    @richardlancaster8303 Рік тому

    Clear around well house then remove building design a cover for the well so you will plenty of room to work.

  • @jasonmushersee
    @jasonmushersee Рік тому

    usually drop down a ladder clean out with buckets need to do the same with my backup dug well suppose to be 65ft it's half that now filling with silt im on 3 billion old granite ledge there's a artesian spring that supplies the old dug well. in the 50's dad worked for a well company dug wells by hand in level 3 wetland never go dry but fill up with frogs daily

  • @csnanny1882
    @csnanny1882 Рік тому

    O no, I just sat down to eat a sandwich and watch you. So I had to postpone my lunch for a few. I am surprised you haven’t checked on this before now. But I know you have lots of other things to do. God bless, keep cool. ❤

  • @ethanbohnert4611
    @ethanbohnert4611 Рік тому

    U need bigger holdin tank. Plus we're in drought so that water seep will flow less n old timers didn't use that much water back in day

  • @travissrhoton
    @travissrhoton Рік тому +3

    If you could find someone that had a old electric pole digger truck, that would make easy work of expanding the well downward after you tore the pump house down. It would be easy to rig up some electric float switches to turn your pump on and off to feed a retention tank down the road after you figured out your recovery rate.

    • @bay9876
      @bay9876 Рік тому

      Concrete lid for the cement tile size, shallow well piston pump with pressure tank. And lots of water.

    • @stephaniewilson3955
      @stephaniewilson3955 Рік тому +2

      If you dig too deep you can undermine the spring and lose it altogether.

  • @BissellMapleFarm
    @BissellMapleFarm Рік тому +1

    That's like real farming there, buddy! It isn't all roses!

  • @kd5inm
    @kd5inm Рік тому

    Maybe look at opening the door up bigger to the well house. Many of those well houses are built that way to protect the spring from contamination. If its a concrete foundation and concrete around the well on the floor, the wall at the bottom of the door keeps animals from digging under the door and getting inside to pollute the well. Thats the reasoning for the small doorway.

  • @TallTexasGMan
    @TallTexasGMan Рік тому

    Get an external tank and let the pump on the well refill that tank. A couple simple floats for on and off would solve the issue (the extra being a backuo off in case one failed).