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Frugal and Energy Efficient Living
In reply to the discussion: A property we bought has a water well which was abandoned by filling with bricks. [View all]guardian
(2,282 posts)32. Be sure to check zoning/water rights
Your comment, "The city made people with wells abandon them" raises a red flag with me.
Different locales and states have varying laws and regulations regarding water rights and water use. I've seen some situations where even though a property may have an old viable well it is illegal to actually draw water from it, or how they use the water is tightly controlled (for example okay for lawn watering but not for in-house use or vice versa). Admittedly this is the exception and not the norm. But it wouldn't hurt to do some CYA just so you know. An ounce of prevention and all that.
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A property we bought has a water well which was abandoned by filling with bricks. [View all]
mbperrin
Mar 2012
OP
Good that you are looking after it. We were walking around the garden in the snow when I was 4 when
applegrove
Mar 2012
#4
$7500 and a 4 month wait for a new well. This area is in year 3 of a horrific drought
mbperrin
Apr 2012
#7
How about some sort of tool grabber thing? It won't get you down 40 ft, but
uppityperson
Apr 2012
#15
We have received less than 3" of rain in the last 3 years. Statewide, 500 million trees have died.
mbperrin
Apr 2012
#27