 Wells
DISINFECTION
OF WELLS
Plan on spending some time doing this job. It
is better to do it right the first time. It only takes a small
amount of bacteria left in the pipes to re-infect the whole
system.
1. During this procedure water
will not be drinkable, so plan to do the test at
a time when there is little need for water. Use
three gallons of fresh,
unscented household
bleach (Clorox has a higher bleach content than
generics). Large diameter or very deep wells may
require more chlorine. Dilute the chorine, one gallon at a time in a
large bucket of water.
2. Remove the cover from the
top of the wells casing. Pour the chlorine
solution into the well casing. Using a clean hose
connected to a faucet that operates from the
well, pour water into the well casing until such
time as you can smell chlorine coming from the
water in the hose. As the hose is removed rotate
it inside the casing to disinfect it. Replace the
cover on the casing.
3. Open each faucet in the
distribution system until you smell chlorine,
then turn off. The goal is to get the chlorine
solution to all the parts of the plumbing,
including both hot and cold waterlines. It is
necessary to run 30 or 40 gallons of water
through the hot water tank. Be sure to flush all the toilets.
4. Leave the chlorinated water
in the pipes a minimum of two hours, preferably overnight.
5. Open all faucets and flush
out the chlorine solution until you can no longer
smell it.
NOTE: If the home is on a septic system use a
hose draining to yard when flushing the system. The
septic may not be able to handle the large volume
of chlorinated water.
6. The well water distribution system
should now be disinfected. Follow-up sampling
should be done after all traces of the chlorine
are gone to insure that the disinfection
procedure was successful.
Note: Large amounts of chlorine can
damage the resin in water softeners so they may
need to be bypassed
before Disinfection. In general it is
usually safe to also chlorinate the water
softener, check the with the manufacturer if the owners manual
states that it should not be chlorinated.
Any in-line water
filters should be removed and replaced with
new filters after the Disinfection is completed.
Re-tested and the results are
again positive
If you have chlorinated the well and the results have come
back positive (it still has bacteria).
Re-chlorinate the well using one more gallon of bleach than
was originally used, and have a water sample re-tested. If the test results come up positive again, a well
technician should be contacted. They will "shock"
the well using bleach tablets. Homeowners should not
attempt to use these tablets, they are highly toxic and
difficult to use.
NOTE: Do not
use chlorine tablets or swimming pool chlorine, it if too
strong and may render the water undrinkable for quite some
time.
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