Trying2keepitReal
Almost Self-Reliant
we have everything but the pondWe have all of the camping gizmos to drink dirty water. We also have a wood stove on which to boil water. We have a pond... and of course we often have snow.
we have everything but the pondWe have all of the camping gizmos to drink dirty water. We also have a wood stove on which to boil water. We have a pond... and of course we often have snow.
It is piped from a reservoir at the top of the hill behind us. There was an issue with the reservoir, and once the engineers fixed that and turned the water back on, apparently it caused 9 bursts on the line to us (we were the 9th). Pipes laid in 1949, clearly need a revamp! But that would be massively disruptive. They kindly dug down by hand to avoid felling my 20 yr old pittisporum, next to which the water was bubbling up, but I can't see them doing that right through the garden!Does your house water come from a well, or the city?
You have reminded me of the ancient solution to this issue.before plumbing, my ancestors took the time (in ROCK country, so the labor involved is impressive), to dig a huge underground cistern.
Was it Orangeburg pipe?thanks all; lots of good and useful advice here.
It is piped from a reservoir at the top of the hill behind us. There was an issue with the reservoir, and once the engineers fixed that and turned the water back on, apparently it caused 9 bursts on the line to us (we were the 9th). Pipes laid in 1949, clearly need a revamp! But that would be massively disruptive. They kindly dug down by hand to avoid felling my 20 yr old pittisporum, next to which the water was bubbling up, but I can't see them doing that right through the garden!
You have reminded me of the ancient solution to this issue.
View attachment 16963
This is the basilica cistern built by the Romans, as one of many under the city Byzantion/Constantinople/Istanbul.
And this is my son gobsmacked by the Piscina Mirabilis near Naples, built before Vesuvius erupted of course
View attachment 16964
These were both lined by Roman hydraulic cement.
what is orangeburg pipe?
Yep, its a mess! Couple years ago we had to take a jackhammer to the basement floor and remove my patio to replace orangeburg sewer pipe. It had completely disintegrated in spots and was blocked with roots and dirt. Previous attempts to roto-rooter had put holes in the pipe and more spots for roots and dirt to enter. Not a fun time.i just had to look it up. basically wood pulp infused with tar/pitch. sold in the USoA during WWII years instead of using metals which were needed for the war effort. oh ghods, what a mess that would be...
i doubt that kind of pipe made it over the pond.
Yep, its a mess! Couple years ago we had to take a jackhammer to the basement floor and remove my patio to replace orangeburg sewer pipe. It had completely disintegrated in spots and was blocked with roots and dirt. Previous attempts to roto-rooter had put holes in the pipe and more spots for roots and dirt to enter. Not a fun time.
ours isn't that, as you guessed, but another post-war quick and dirty material: asbestos cement. Since they are replacing the broken bits with a plastic pipe that fits inside, I was thinking the same thing about replacement. Though of course now it would snag at every repair - and there's loads of them!