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Private Water Supplies. everything is voluntary!. Sanitary well cap. Good casing. Sloping Ground. Soil. Grout seal. Bedrock. Water Table. Groundwater “aquifer”. Protect the Wellhead Area!. X. Some Problems Occur Naturally. Iron. Hydrogen Sulfide. Hardness. Manganese. Corrosive.
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Private Water Supplies everything is voluntary!
Sanitary well cap Good casing Sloping Ground Soil Grout seal Bedrock Water Table Groundwater “aquifer”
Some Problems Occur Naturally Iron Hydrogen Sulfide Hardness Manganese Corrosive
How do I know what to test my water for? • Symptoms – tastes, odors, stains • Local land use and activities • Local water testing results
Symptoms • White residue, dull laundry - hardness • Reddish stains, metallic taste – iron • Black stains, metallic taste - manganese • Rotten egg odor - hydrogen sulfide gas • Blue stains, metallic taste - corrosive water
Coliform Bacteria • A large group of common surface bacteria • Indicate the “potential” for harmful bacteria • Possible sources • Surface water • Animal waste • Septic system • Occur frequently especially in springs and shallow wells
The Most Common Problems % of water supplies with problem
Common Aesthetic Problems % of water supplies with problem
Water Testing • Routine tests give you protection • Use certified labs! • Annual bacteria test • Every 3 years – pH, TDS, local pollutant
Interpreting a Water Test • Compare your result with the Drinking Water Standard which gives the “acceptable” level • Primary Standard (MCL) • health risk • Secondary Standard (RMCL) • taste, stain, odor
Drought Stages • Drought Watch • 5% voluntary water use reduction • Drought Warning • 10-15% voluntary water use reduction • Drought Emergency • Mandatory water restrictions • Ban on non-essential water use • These DO apply to private wells & springs
How is the Drought Stage Determined? • Precipitation • Stream flow • Groundwater levels • Palmer Drought Index • Reservoir storage
Historical Droughts in Pennsylvania Palmer Drought Index
Drought Outlook • Short-term relief likely • Ground water and surface water drought will continue • 12 to 20 inches of precipitation needed over next three months
Natural Groundwater Fluctuations Ground Surface Deeper Underground
No pumping “static water level” Submersible pump
Normal “drawdown”
Sporadic Water Loss
Permanent Water Loss
More and More Users! 1 million wells and counting Wells drilled 1966-1994
Pennsylvania Water Law • You do NOT own the water under your property • You are entitled to “reasonable use” • Little protection of existing sources • Permitting of large users in Delaware and Susquehanna Basins • Several pending bills on water use
Preventing a Dry Well • Obtain your well log • Your well driller • Bureau of Topographic and Geologic Survey • 717-702-2074 • Identify alternate sources • Always conserve water! • Talk to neighbors, local well drillers • Monitor your water supply if possible • Monitor nearby wells on the web
http://wwwpah2o.er.usgs.gov/ observed average record low
If You Lose Your Water . . . • Water may return in time • Emergency water conservation • Reduce peak demands • Have well driller determine the cause • Faulty or worn-out pump • Electrical problem • Low water level • Lower the pump in the existing well • Deepen existing well • Drill new well • Beware of unlicensed drillers
Always Conserve Water!
Achieving Water Conservation • Change in water use habits • Install water saving devices
Water UseStudy of Eight Families in Central PA • Average use • 100 to 322 gallons per day • Peak use • 240 to 880 gallons per day
Consumptive Water Use Septic System Non-Consumptive Water Use
Average Water Use Gallons per person per day Toilet Shower Clothes Outside Other Bath Washer
Clothes Washer • Standard • 40 to 55 gallons per load • Front-loading • 22 to 33 gallons per load
Showers • Standard • 4 to 6 gallons per minute • Low flow • 2 gallons per minute
Faucets • Standard • 4 to 6 gallons per minute • Flow control aerators • Kitchen – 1.5 gallons per minute • Bathroom – 0.5 gallons per minute
Effect of Water Conservation Total savings = 32%
Types of Water Treatment • Point of entry • Point of use
Examples of Point of Entry • Water softener • Ultraviolet light (disinfection) • Carbon filter (volatiles)
Examples of Point of Use • Reverse osmosis • Distiller • Carbon filter • faucet or counter-top
Water Treatment • Disinfection • Ion exchange • Oxidation-reduction • Filtration
Ultraviolet Light Sterilizer U-V Tube