A small part of me was hoping it was actually chocolate milk... |
Nooo....
At 10pm my Dad and I drove the hour back out to the lakehouse, and I threw the breaker (puttered for a few minutes, to my Dad's chagrin), and then drove another hour back into town. At least I could sleep easy, knowing the pump wouldn't overheat and catch fire. The next morning I drove back out to our house to meet my father-in-law, who kindly drove out from his place to investigate. Long story short: our well was dry! I also learned that the well cover is ridiculously heavy concrete. We suspect that because of our really, really cold winter, coupled with very little snowfall, the three sources that feed our well had frozen. That's the problem with less snow: it doesn't provide the insulation we country folk need. Fortunately the lines to our house weren't frozen, so we were able to pay for a water delivery ($225). At first, the water level kept dropping so the whole truck ended up getting pumped into our well - it's the same price, apparently, whether we need some or all of the water. We had no idea if the water would stay, or disappear overnight, because unlike a reservoir a well won't just hold water indefinitely. I started melting snow to flush the toilets and we crossed our fingers.
It looks like topping it up - combined with balmy temperatures that helped things thaw - worked, because we're back in business. We check the level daily and, not only did enough water stay in the well, it also looks like water is coming in again because the levels have dropped only a little bit. Whew! Happily, this didn't happen earlier in the winter because we might have had to make a monthly, or weekly, appointment for water. I know people who have gone a month or more without water because their well or water lines froze, and so a water delivery wouldn't even help.
Just another reason to love spring! And another way that rural living keeps us on our toes. Next time I'll have to tell you about our $400 internet bill...
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