
01/05/12, 08:31 PM
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Banned
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Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 7,802
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Maverick_mg
The idea would be to only use it to keep things cold. I guess I'm gonna have to do some dousing and some hole digging. A lot of the spring/milk houses I've seen in the area all seem to have a concrete tub with a pipe going in one side and coming out the other. But they are all dried up now so I have no idea how they "worked" i.e where the water was coming from.
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If you're going to do it yourself here's a little tip for you to try before you go dowsing and digging a bunch of holes to see how high the water table is. First locate any places on the property where there are natural concave depressions and hollows in the lay of the land, look especially for hollows where there is lush growth of ground cover inside the depressions. Very often hollows are created because of shallow artesians or flowing water beneath them, that water causes the ground to sink downwards.
When I find hollows like that then I do dowse them for indications of water but dowsing may tell me there's water there but not how deep down. If I get a positive for water then I take a 6 feet long piece of rebar and pound it down into the middle of the depression to a depth of 3 or 4 feet if possible then pull it straight back up and look for moisture and wet clay or dirt at the end. If it comes out dry then I move on to another hollow and try there. If it comes out wet at the end I measure the depth of it on the rebar then dig a small hole to the depth of moisture indicated by the rebar. Then I leave it for 24 hours and come back later to see if the little hole has filled in with water or if the sides of the hole have completely crumbled and fallen inwards into the hole. If either of those 2 things happens then I know that is a good place to dig a bigger, deeper bowl shaped hole.
I personally don't use concrete tubs, cisterns or plastic liners in the holes as it's been my experience that they can impede the flow of water seepage into and out of the hole and you can end up with stagnant water in the hole. I use rocks or bricks to completely line the bottom and sides of the holes so the water can seep in from bottom and all sides. Also that way, if I inadvertently hit an artesian gusher I can slow down or stop the flow of water by filling in the source of the gusher with gravel and cover it with small rocks. There's nothing more frustrating than hitting an artesian gusher under high pressure and having it overflow and create an unwanted and wasted stream.
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