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Water for the
House on Hummingbird Hill comes out of the ground -- typical well
system -- or not so typical.
Actually, they
originally tried to drill the well at the top of the ridge against
which the house nestles, because that's where the two 4,000-gallon
storage tanks are. But it didn't work, so one was successfully drilled
about 50 feet east of the house itself.
The well pump
is only 1/4-horsepower and is down 400 feet. Most experts would
say "no way!" to those numbers. Yes way!
The pump is
an intelligent Grundfos DC-powered positive-displacement beast.
It's hooked up to a 3/4-inch poly pipe so it's relatively easy to
raise and lower the pump. Two people can do it by hand.
The water storage
tanks are hundreds of feet above the house and the hill between
the two is often too steep to walk on.
They needed
to run a 4-inch line from the tanks to a fire hydrant near the house,
so they used 40-foot lengths of poly pipe fused end to end on site.
Getting it in
place required staking a 6-foot corrugated pipe in place along the
entire 700-foot run first and then sliding the 4-inch line inside
it.
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Top left, Larry
Weingarten and the tanks. Top right: getting creative: How do you
get 40-foot pipe anywhere? He had to lengthen the trailer so the
pipe didn't stick too far out and not make any sharp turns because
of the pipe stuck in the back of his van. Below, Larry and the pipe-fusing
tool. Larry had to take a class, pass a test and receive certification
to use the tool.
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