Is it practical to drill your own well? Sure!
With the right know-how and equipment, in the right location you can enjoy your own water.
Why not take control of your water supply?
TheĀ 2 videos that follow will show you, step-by-step how to drill your own well.
Check them out On the Following pages:
Wouldn’t work I don’t think in East Texas where I live. To much iron ore and rock.
Dave do you think this would work
What will you do when you’re told ‘It’s not your water’ ?? Bad times…..
Drop some money & get the right people to do it.
that would work in sandy soil ,,never would do here where i’m sitting on bed rock ,,cost me 8000 to have a 125 foot well drilled but they hit a underground aquifer and i get 4 gallons a minute ,,was well worth the cost to have good unchlorinated clean mountain water
hard to drill a well if you are drilling a well because you need water.
Kenna Cossin Hartwell – I know you mentioned a well today IF… Not sure this would be a help or not to you
I have seen small powered units where I used to work years ago when our well went dry. I kind of wonder if a person living in the city can drill their own or are water rights an issue.
Bwaaahaaaahaaaa. Go root around for nuts and berries while you’re at it, psychos.
If I had enough property to find a discrete place to do it, I’m not sure I’d care what the city had to say about it. It’s not like our government is so concerned with protecting our best interests these days. And, fyi, an old-fashioned hand-pump will pull up plenty of water if the water table’s high enough (no more than about 20-25 ft. down). There are other, stronger hand-pumps that can pull from 200 ft. or so. Then, of course, many people hook an electric pump to a solar panel or two and have running water without having to manually pump it. https://www.lehmans.com/c-274-water-pumps.aspx