| Water Supply Engineering
Environmental
Fact Sheet |
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| WD-DWGB-1-4 | 2007 |
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Dug Well Design For the most part, this document assumes the reader will be installing a new well. See comments near the end for suggestions concerning inspection of existing dug wells. For springs see fact sheet WD-DWGB-1-6 Point Well Design. For well abandonment, see the fact sheet WD-DWGB-1-7 Well Abandonment and Decommissioning. Government Regulations
There are statewide design criteria rules for dug well construction and placement. These rules were revised in 2000. The rules are numbered We 100-1000. There are no state requirements concerning minimum well quality or quantity. Finally RSA 477:4-c requires, when selling a home with an on-site water system, disclosure of the water system's location, malfunctions, date of installation, date of the most recent water test, and whether or not the seller has experienced a problem such as an unsatisfactory water test. Local Regulations: Some towns may have local permit requirements relative to the placement, construction, water quantity or quality for private wells. Please contact your local health officer or code enforcement officer for particulars. Evaluating a New Water System
Determining How Much Well Yield You Need
DES has published a document entitled "Well Yield, How Much Water is Enough?," which is available for $2 through the Water Well Board. The US Department of Agriculture, Farmers Home Administration Guidelines requires a minimum well yield of 1,200 gallons for a four-hour period. For more information on minimum well yield please see fact sheet WD-DWGB-1-8 Recommended Minimum Water Supply Capacity for Private Wells. It should also be noted that a well's yield may change with time. This change can be a seasonal variation or long-term trend. Thus, one should try to develop the maximum well depth within economic reason when the well is first installed. It is not uncommon to have at least a 5-10 foot variation between early spring and late fall groundwater levels. This variation can be significant in wells of limited depth. Dug wells are more susceptible to drought. This condition can be minimized by excavating the bottom of the well significantly below the seasonal low water table. The seasonal high water table can be determined by soil experts based on color change of the soil. It is difficult to determine the seasonal low water table. Consequently the depth of a dug well is normally governed by the capability of the construction equipment, or the level at which you encounter bedrock or till. The best time to construct a dug well is in the early fall when low water tables allow the deepest well construction. This will minimize muddy conditions and excavation cave-in. Water Quality Considerations
Well Protection and Placement
Examples of chemical hazards to a well include the application or inadvertent spillage of fertilizer, pesticides, and inappropriate disposal of old crankcase oil, anti-freeze or solvents, or waste salt brine from water softeners. Thus, the use of chemicals in your backyard, or that of your uphill neighbors, may negatively affect the quality of the water table from which your well draws. Laboratory tests for these chemicals can be costly. The best and least costly approach to protect water quality is prevention of pollution rather than treatment after the fact. Be careful with respect to the use and disposal of chemicals near and upstream of your well. The following protective distances are required or recommended when locating a well for a private single family home: a) Surface water and drainage culverts should not pass within 25 feet of a well; 50+ feet is recommended. Choosing The Well Type You Will Purchase
Contracting With a Dug Well Contractor
Construction of New Dug Wells
The well should be as deep as possible to prevent its going dry during droughts. Excavate in the fall. Try to prevent an accumulation of fine silt in the bottom of the excavation. An accumulation of silt may form an impervious layer reducing the entry of water into the completed well. Before placing the crushed stone and casings, break-up this fine sediment layer. At least 10 feet of soil should cover the highest level of crushed stone. During backfill, place the soil in 1 foot lifts and compact to prevent future settlement. Settlement creates open pathways in the soil that will allow the entry of bacteria into the finished well. Stone Bed
Pipe or Concrete Tile Sections
Water should enter the well at the bottom, either horizontally or up through the bottom. This will ensure maximum filtration of water through the soil. The lowest concrete casing may have perforations in its side wall. Wire reinforced concrete is suggested for well casing rings and the top cover.
Apron
Cover
The cover should overhang the well and have raindrip on the underside to prevent the leakage of contamination into the well. The cover shape shown in the diagram is not regularly available in New Hampshire; however, we are requesting that concrete precasters adopt this shape in order to solve the underside leakage potential. The underside of the well cover may not be totally flat. It is suggested that reference marks be placed on the cover and casing to ensure the same alignment each time the cover is replaced. Mortar or sealants can then be placed on the vertical sidewall to match irregularities on the under side of the cover. As an alternative, high points in the casing can be marked and ground down by an abrasive wheel or circular saw. DES suggests the cover overhang the casing by at least 3 inches. This may help keep the soils next to the well casing dry, which in turn may reduce the incidents of frost heaving of the top casing. Another option to allow an observation port in the cover would be to fabricate a second light weight, easily removable cover to fit over the entire concrete cover. This second cover would act as a rain shield. This shield should be lockable to prevent vandalism and could be made from welded steel, aluminum or sheet metal. The locking attachment can be on the side edge of the concrete cover. Plastic sheeting is not stable and is not recommended. Water Supply Line and Pump
After Construction Activities
The intent of the pump test is to develop an equilibrium between the amount of water being pumped out of the well and the amount which is replenished naturally from the ground. The discharge should be piped at least 200 feet from the well, and downhill, if possible, to prevent recycling or "double counting." Do not run this dirty water through your plumbing. If the drawdown in the well is at a relative maximum and has stabilized, this can be considered as the maximum safe yield of the well for that season of the year. This test should be run in the early fall when the groundwater table is generally at its lowest. Otherwise, it must be recognized that a lower water table will reduce the well's yield. The use of a very high capacity pump or fire truck to pump the well dry once then allowing it to refill, does not, in our opinion, provide useful information. For additional information concerning pump tests to determine well yield see fact sheet WD-DWGB-1-13 Determining the Yield of a Residential Well. Disinfection - Chlorination
The well can be disinfected by adding chlorine. One gallon of 5.25 percent sodium hypochlorite (common store bleach, such as Clorox) in 1,000 gallons of water will provide a good disinfecting solution of 50 parts per million (ppm). The quantity of water inside the casing of dug wells is shown below:
The volume inside the well casing does not include the volume of water readily available in the crushed stone that normally surrounds the bottom of the well. As a rough rule of thumb, we suggest doubling the calculated volume. The procedure outlined below should be followed when you disinfect your well. Add the chlorine directly to the well, plus an extra amount for the water in the crushed stone beyond the casing. Mix by using a strong flow of water through a clean garden hose recirculated directly back into the well. Run each faucet in your home until a chlorine smell is detectable. Close the faucets and allow the chlorine to stay in the well and the plumbing 12-24 hours. Chlorine will not work its way uphill against the general movement of the watertable downhill. If your well's construction is "perfect," and if you still have bacterial problems, try digging one or two small holes into the soil "upstream" of the well and add a dilute chlorine solution directly into the ground. Refill these holes with fine grain soil. Then, flush that area with water from a hose to disperse the chlorine down to the watertable on the uphill side of the well. After 12-24 hours, flush chlorine from the water system. Flush onto the ground, but not into a stream or pond. For more information on disinfection please see fact sheet WD-DWGB-4-11 Disinfection a Private Well. Testing New Wells for Water Quality
The DES laboratory conducts bacterial tests and a standard analysis, which tests for 13 water quality factors. Only DES sampling containers can be used. The time to process the standard analysis is approximately three weeks in the summer and two weeks otherwise. Different containers are required for sampling radon gas, industrial solvents and hydrogen sulfide. Sampling containers can be obtained from the DES Laboratory Services Unit. See fact sheet WD-DWGB-2-1for Suggested Water Quality Testing for Private Wells. We recommend that a bacterial sample be taken on an annual basis for dug wells in view of their shallow construction and non precise casing materials. Bacterial sampling is best done after heavy rainfall. Please contact the Laboratory Services Unit at (603) 271-3445 or (603) 271-3446, or www.des.nh.gov/lab, for more information and/or for current fees. Inspecting Existing Dug Wells
When inspecting an existing dug well, look for any defects or openings in the casing that will allow foreign substances or small animals to enter the well. Also look for points where surface runoff can enter the well casing directly. The essence of good construction is ensuring filtration of all water that enters the well. Existing dug wells, especially those built of field-stone, are frequently subject to construction deficiencies which allow surface runoff, carrying bacteria and virus, to enter the well unimpeded. To prevent this problem, all joints between the field stones, near the top part of the well, should be mortared, and then the entire outside surface of the well, to a few feet below the finished backfill grade, should be uniformly coated with cement mortar so as to provide a smooth, one piece exterior surface. This sealing should extend down below the ground surface to the extent that conditions permit. Accomplishing this one piece construction requires a substantial effort for field stone wells. Typically in older wells, the backfill around the well casing has settled. Where concrete or V.C. tiles have been used, the top two joints should be sealed if possible. Once completed, soil should be mounded up around outside of the well as shown. Wood covers are another common dug well deficiency because they allow leakage and are susceptible to rotting. Further, water and debris can drain between the wood slats and into the well unfiltered. We recommend a solid one-piece concrete cover. The cover should extend beyond the well casing. The backfill next to the well casing should be mounded. To achieve reliable bacterial water quality, the well construction MUST exclude ALL dust, dirt, surface water, and animals. If the well is not tight, and if there is not effective filtration of every drop of water entering the well, the well is NOT safe to use. For Additional Information
Note: This fact sheet is accurate as of January 2007. Statutory or regulatory changes, or the availability of additional information after this date may render this information inaccurate or incomplete. |
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