Those who pay monthly water bills will appreciate our monthly water bill over here: $0. When we built a house in the village, we were able to hook up a pipeline to the government well and have reliable water.
Welllll, most of the time.
You get what you pay for. After our third daughter was born, we got a water tank, because by then, the water was only on at night. Then it trickled down to nothing. After speaking with municipal workers "busy" playing solitaire on their computers who laughingly promised to come fix the government's pump in our area, but still having NO water three weeks later, last week we finally purchased a well!
Going without something really increases your gratitude when you get that thing back again! We are so thankful for our new well. It was like having a field trip in our own backyard to see the big trucks come in to drill the well. We had a light school day so the kids could follow the process. Would you like to see?
This truck has the drill on the back. We barely fit the truck into our driveway and had to remove our beautiful honeysuckle-lined arch (without a new drill my husband had just bought to put up a security door against our neighbor thief, who just stole the drill two days before--isn't that ironic?)
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The hose going over to the right is connected to a second truck, which hosts the compressor (the power source) for the drill. |
A shovel near the drill catches some dirt that they measure out onto our driveway in piles representing one meter further down each. The rest of the dirt is scooped into a wall to direct the water down the road for when we hit water. It's neat to note the difference in soil colors for each meter further down.
Then they put in the "casing." This doesn't go the full 55 meters down, only about 35. Inside that goes the pipeline and the pump to pump the water up to our tank. From that an electrical line is run into the house, mounted in a box on the wall, and attached to a plug. Whenever we switch on the plug, water fills our tank. We had a manhole cover made to cover the top of the well.
2 comments:
Loved this glimpse into your lives, especially the pictures of the children and the different piles of dirt. I'd never seen anything like that before. (You learn something every day!) I'm glad you have water and pray it gets to be clean soon.
Thanks, Lou Ann!
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