Disinfecting a Well Contaminated With Bacteria and/or Hydrogen Sulfide Odors


Posted March 30, 2019 by cleanairpurewater

For more details on our products and services, please feel free to visit us at home water purification system, kitchen water filter, home water purification systems, well water filter, whole house water filtration system

 
The following is a state suggested formula for using bleach to disinfect a well:
1. Remove well cover. Pour the required amount of bleach into the well. SEE TABLE BELOW.
2. Run ALL faucets in the house, one at a time, until you smell the chlorine at the faucet.
This ensures that the whole system will be disinfected.
3. Connect a garden hose to an outside tap or an indoor tap with the correct thread fitting. Put the other end of the hose into the well, turn on the faucet, and from time to time move the hose so that the chlorinated water bathes the sidewalls of the well casing. Do this for at least six hours. Turn off tap and remove the hose from the well.
4. Replace the well cover.
5. DON’T USE THE WATER for at least twelve hours. Forty-eight hours in optimal.
6. Run the water to waste but NOT IN THE SEPTIC SYSTEM for several hours, or until the chlorine taste is dilute enough to be unobjectionable. The best way to run the water to waste is to use the garden hose mentioned above (item 3). Direct the hose into an area where the chlorinated water will not cause environmental damage or affect the water supply of others. For a typical well, this may take 3-4 hours.
NOTE: To avoid pump overheating and possible damage, turn off the water when flow is at a trickle and wait at least 15 minutes before turning on the pump again.
7. After a week of use, retest for bacteria.
8. In some cases, one chlorination treatment WILL NOT be sufficient. Repeat disinfection procedures as needed. You can also use calcium hypochlorite granules to provide a continuous release of chlorine in your well.
Further thoughts....
Be aware of activities in your community that can put your drinking water at risk. Talk to your neighbors to determine if problems with your drinking water are individual or community-wide. Check out the history of the area in which you live to determine if past activities are having a present impact on your drinking water.
And manage your own septic tank if you have one. Replenish it on occasion with bacteria (I use Roebic K-37, which you can buy at any hardware store) to aid in digestion and limit your use of chemicals in the house, such as bleach, Lysol, and other sanitizers, that will kill the bacteria in the septic. Visit my link on using natural cleaning products to learn more.
For more details on our products and services, please feel free to visit us at home water purification system, kitchen water filter, home water purification systems, well water filter, whole house water filtration system
-- END ---
Share Facebook Twitter
Print Friendly and PDF DisclaimerReport Abuse
Contact Email [email protected]
Issued By cleanairpurewater
Country United States
Categories Business
Last Updated March 30, 2019