is your well water safe? by bob schultheis agricultural engineering specialist

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Is Your Is Your Well Water Safe? Well Water Safe? by by Bob Schultheis Bob Schultheis Agricultural Engineering Agricultural Engineering Specialist Specialist

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Page 1: Is Your Well Water Safe? by Bob Schultheis Agricultural Engineering Specialist

Is Your Is Your Well Water Safe?Well Water Safe?

byby

Bob SchultheisBob SchultheisAgricultural Engineering SpecialistAgricultural Engineering Specialist

Page 2: Is Your Well Water Safe? by Bob Schultheis Agricultural Engineering Specialist

MissouriMissouriWater Supply StatisticsWater Supply Statistics

890,000 Missourians on private water supplies

86% on drilled wells 300,000-350,000 active wells 10,000-20,000 new wells drilled annually One abandoned well or cistern for every

80 acres of land (DNR estimate)

– Webster Co. = 4,700+ wells over 379,000 ac.

Page 3: Is Your Well Water Safe? by Bob Schultheis Agricultural Engineering Specialist

What is Coliform?What is Coliform?

Coliform bacteria are used as indicator organisms to test for contamination of drinking water.– >1 coliform = “Unsatisfactory” in DOH tests

E. coli is a member of the coliform family and is commonly found in raw sewage.

E. coli is responsible for manyhealth-threatening diseases.

Page 4: Is Your Well Water Safe? by Bob Schultheis Agricultural Engineering Specialist

Coliform-Associated Coliform-Associated DiseasesDiseases

Cholera Typhoid Salmonella Shigella Staphylococcus Hepatitis A, B, C Polio Viral Gastroenteritis

Page 5: Is Your Well Water Safe? by Bob Schultheis Agricultural Engineering Specialist

1994 Coliform Detection 1994 Coliform Detection StudyStudy

May to Nov. 1994 well survey 9 states- Illinois, Iowa, Kansas,

Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska,North Dakota, South Dakota, Wisconsin

41.3% tested positive E. coli detects averaged 11.1% Missouri E. coli detects - highest at

22.6%

Page 6: Is Your Well Water Safe? by Bob Schultheis Agricultural Engineering Specialist

Sampling Sampling ResultsResults

Private WellsPrivate Wells

Area 1 Area 2 Area 3 Area 4 Area 5 Area 6 Sp Area

0

20

40

60

80

100

TC EC NO3-N

1

2

3 4

5

6

Page 7: Is Your Well Water Safe? by Bob Schultheis Agricultural Engineering Specialist

Factors Contributing to Factors Contributing to Coliform DetectsColiform Detects

Improperly constructed wells Poorly maintained wells Ineffective on-site sewage systems Proximity to livestock feeding

operations Karst geologic formations

Page 8: Is Your Well Water Safe? by Bob Schultheis Agricultural Engineering Specialist

NitratesNitrates

Nitrate detects are relatively low although not uncommon. (up to 16% of samples)– >10 ppm NO3-N = “Unsatisfactory”

Sources– Livestock facilities (esp. abandoned ones)– N & P fertilizer in excess of crop removal

capability– Failing septic systems

Page 9: Is Your Well Water Safe? by Bob Schultheis Agricultural Engineering Specialist

D.O.H. Water Quality D.O.H. Water Quality SurveySurvey

August 1999August 1999

Webster County“gridded” for random sampling

61 participants

Page 10: Is Your Well Water Safe? by Bob Schultheis Agricultural Engineering Specialist

D.O.H. Water Quality D.O.H. Water Quality SurveySurvey

August 1999 Results - Webster August 1999 Results - Webster CountyCounty

44%

Private wellstesting positive

for coliform bacteria

28%

Sewage systemswith open discharge& surfacing effluent

Page 11: Is Your Well Water Safe? by Bob Schultheis Agricultural Engineering Specialist

Soils in Webster CountySoils in Webster County 79% rated “severe” for pollution 79% rated “severe” for pollution

potentialpotential 21% rated “moderate”21% rated “moderate” 0% rated “slight”0% rated “slight”

“Losing” stream

Page 12: Is Your Well Water Safe? by Bob Schultheis Agricultural Engineering Specialist
Page 13: Is Your Well Water Safe? by Bob Schultheis Agricultural Engineering Specialist

Solution Channel

Page 14: Is Your Well Water Safe? by Bob Schultheis Agricultural Engineering Specialist

What’s Wrong with this What’s Wrong with this Well?Well?

Page 15: Is Your Well Water Safe? by Bob Schultheis Agricultural Engineering Specialist

Ways to ReduceWays to Reduce Well Contamination Well Contamination 11

Soil blanket (5+ feet thick) is good filter

Elevation = keep above pollution sources

Distance = 200+ feet horiz. separation

Grout well with neat-cement or bentonite clay by state-certified well driller

Use approved sanitary well cap

Rehab. poorly constructed wells

Page 16: Is Your Well Water Safe? by Bob Schultheis Agricultural Engineering Specialist
Page 17: Is Your Well Water Safe? by Bob Schultheis Agricultural Engineering Specialist

Ways to ReduceWays to ReduceWell Contamination Well Contamination 22

Plug abandoned wells & cisterns

Repair/move/replace failing septic systems

Apply fertilizer & animal manure according to soil test & manure test

Repair/upgrade animal waste facilities

Install containment for fuels & pesticides

Page 18: Is Your Well Water Safe? by Bob Schultheis Agricultural Engineering Specialist

Ways to ReduceWays to ReduceWell Contamination Well Contamination 33

Don’t dump anything into sinkholes

Use grass buffer strips (50+ feet wide)as filters around sinkholes

Promote community awareness of risk

Shock-chlorinate active wells after anyplumbing repairs

Page 19: Is Your Well Water Safe? by Bob Schultheis Agricultural Engineering Specialist

Shock-Chlorinating YourShock-Chlorinating Your6-inch Diameter Well 6-inch Diameter Well 11

Remove well cap or unscrew vent pipe

Newer wells Older wells

Page 20: Is Your Well Water Safe? by Bob Schultheis Agricultural Engineering Specialist

Shock-Chlorinating YourShock-Chlorinating Your6-inch Diameter Well 6-inch Diameter Well 22

Mix chlorine & water inbucket. Pour into well– Liquid bleach @ 1 pint

per 25’ of water depth, or– Chlorine tablets @ 0.5 lb.

per 150’ of water depth Circulate water back down well Load chlorinated water into

plumbing system

Page 21: Is Your Well Water Safe? by Bob Schultheis Agricultural Engineering Specialist

Shock-Chlorinating YourShock-Chlorinating Your6-inch Diameter Well 6-inch Diameter Well 33

Let chlorine water stand insystem at least 12 hours

Flush system with water,starting outside

Retest for bacteria after 7-10 days– $10 cost; DOH has sterile sample bottle – Keep sample cool & dark, get to lab in 6 hours

Keep test results with important papers

Page 22: Is Your Well Water Safe? by Bob Schultheis Agricultural Engineering Specialist

University InformationUniversity InformationGuides AvailableGuides Available

WQ100 Water Testing: What to Test For WQ101 Understanding Your Water Test

Report WQ102 Bacteria in Drinking Water WQ103 Nitrate in Drinking Water WQ104 Understanding Home Water

Treatment Systems

Page 23: Is Your Well Water Safe? by Bob Schultheis Agricultural Engineering Specialist

Questions??Questions????

Robert A. (Bob) Schultheis

Agricultural Engineering Specialist

Webster County Extension Center

800 S. Marshall, P.O. Box 7

Marshfield, MO 65706-0007

Voice: 417-859-2044

Fax: 417-468-2086

E-mail: [email protected]

Website: http://outreach.missouri.edu/webster