Since we've lived in Wales, we have never had to pay water rates, as we have always been on a private (own spring at Ynyswen, shared one here) water supply. Here it runs through a UV system. Every year we have to replace the UV bulb, and every couple of years, the glass liner it sits in. The filter gets changed every three months - although because of the sludge in the holding tank, it is full of mud after just a couple of weeks. When you get to 7 days, the wretched device starts to beep every couple of minutes to let you know it needs changing. I am always VERY glad when I have a new one installed.
At Ynyswen, we had water from a spring, which was stored in big concrete rings with a gravel filter, and then ran by gravity through a modern blue alkethene pipe, underground, to another concrete holding tank in the yard. From there it was pumped to the top of the house, but flowed readily from downstairs taps. It tasted wonderful. We didn't have a UV system (incoming people insisted on one, which they put in). The spring was marked on the map, and on our land . . . The plonker sold us the field with the spring in . . . We were very glad to get it all set up because before we had to share his water supply which was in a leaky ancient tank on his land, and when it ran low in dry weather, he would top it up with river water - transported in his rinsed-out-once (if that!) slurry tanker. Needless to say we couldn't drink it, bathing in it was far from ideal (leading to feminine infections) and all the washing came out smelling like slurry. But it was our sole water supply for years and we got through a lot of bottled water . . .
Here I share my water with the cottages below me, and again it is from a spring, and this one has a name, it has been in use so long, but that is a MILE away, and uphill again, on a neighbouring farm. It flows through 200 year old earthenware pipes to the reservoir, which is about 1/4 mile away and was built at a similar time and is on another property. Sometimes the pipes become blocked with tree roots . . . The reservoir has a roof, but also has about 5 feet of silt in the bottom, which our water runs through and although it is sterilized by the UV filter, there is still fine residue in the water. Not ideal, but if we were all to go on the Mains, that would run through an ancient asbestos pipe (WHY did they use that?!), pressure is awful and will get worse because a housing estate of 40 houses or so is being built and that will have to have its supply from the same system/pipe.
I paid around £150 a couple of weeks back for the replacement UV bulb, new glass and two filters. I've just paid the plumber £40 for the changeover, but that included unblocking two U-bends too. He needs to drop off some eco-friendly drain unblocker though as he said the problem is further along the pipes. Needless to say, we have private drainage (a septic tank) too.
I find your explanation so interesting about your UV filtration system, Bovey. I've heard of them & was wondering. We have well water & do not use the typical salted softener that everyone & their uncle seems to use. The salt in the water seeps through my skin, into my body, and causes my hypertension to go crazy. And I don't like dumping all that salted water through the septic system, out into the land. Salt water is only for salt water fish, in my view! So we use straight well water which is full of iron. We'd have to change the filter on a UV system every time we blinked too. Our pipes are beyond corroded with iron sediment, I am sure. *sigh* We don't drink the water...we buy bottled...but I do cook with it more times than not. We just had our well water tested & it tested just fine except for the iron content, which was through the roof. I love living out here, where we have for 29 years, except for the water issue. Thank you for explaining about the UV system. ~Andrea xoxo
ReplyDeleteAndrea - I will add a bit more to the post for you. Salted water instead of UV system? Not for me.
ReplyDeleteThank you Bovey!
DeleteI am always surprised at some of the primitive life hacks of life in Wales/ Britain. Wood to heat the house? No screens in windows? No dryers, no air conditioning--and now this. My water is included in the general local tax, pumped from an under the sand aquifer.I think in very rural areas water was pumped from deep wells, but not sure.
ReplyDeleteMany properties in rural areas in Wales have their own water supply. It was ever thus. They are so far from the main lanes where there is a Council supply, and will never benefit as it would be horrendously expensive. We rarely get hot enough to warrant air conditioning. Don't need screens for the windows - we just open them and any insects which venture in get attracted to an old-fashioned flypaper!! Or the cats get them. Or they fly out again. I am fortunate that the two North-facing bedrooms (one with a small East window too) have had wooden shutters installed internally, which prevents the freezing air on the glass in winter, getting into the room and lowering the temperature. Horses for courses.
ReplyDeleteWith the screens it's flies, gnats, mosquitoes that bite---I am terribly allergic, gnat bites are awful. But it's the birds flying in that upset me, I used to leave my deck door open for my dog, but No. Poor birds....[and you had bats.] Your home always sounds lovely, I guess it's just what one is used to. I remember being appalled my parents' home in Cape Cod did not have trash pick up. It was okay when they were younger but as my mom aged and needed to survive alone, dump trips were a big issue. She was tiny and frail, not up to hauling rubbish twice a week or coping w animals who'd come to the garage to feast on the waiting garbage.
DeleteYes, wood - or coal to heat the house in woodburners or all fuel burners. I have oil fired central heating. Some people have gas-fired, some electric powered. Air source heat pumps are being touted now but don't work well for older properties such as this.
ReplyDeleteI've passed your email on to a friend who is looking at water systems like you have. She is a downsizer forum member like myself, but hasn't been active on the forum for a while, busy looking after her daughter who sadly recently died.
ReplyDeleteI hope I can be of use to your friend.
Deletewe had beautiful, fresh spring water in a well in our back yard, until the water board cordially came along one day and condemned it, forcing us to use the chemically treated mains water.
ReplyDeleteMy sister has a UV system on their water supply and swears by it.
ReplyDeleteGod bless.
Well, the water is fine. Never had any problems.
DeleteWhat a fascinating post. My sister and brother in law get their water from a spring. They just put in a UV system. They phrase it: 'We still got little critters in the water, but they're dead'. We have a well, 100 feet deep. So far, so good. It seems to recover quickly, so hopefully it will meet our needs. Tim drinks it. I'm afraid to.
ReplyDeleteYou should be able to get your water tested. The Council come here every few years to test ours and it's ok. If the water worries you, put a UV system on. I would say though, if Tim's still standing, I am sure the water is fine! If it bothers you that much, boil it and bottle it. Nothing would survive being boiled.
DeleteWhenever you mention your water supply I just think of Elizabeth West in the Hovel having to wait all day for a jug to fill at their stream in the very dry summers!
ReplyDeleteI hope you never have that problem!
Gosh yes, I recall that now. No, I have VERY good pressure here, BUT the new chap two doors down has a productive veg garden and would happily run off all the water if it was under threat, as apparently he did this when he first came here and we had scarce water due to blockage. But then that came via the farmers up the hill and they wanted to buy the cottage but wouldn't offer enough money and lost out. Peeved as a result and never a good word for him!!
DeleteWell your water seems to be working now, never experienced water from a well but if it rolled down a mountain would be quite happy to drink it. Langley Burrell made me sit up. not for Kilvert but for the medieval kiln we excavated.
ReplyDeleteWell, it's from/through a holding tank, not from a deep well dug to reach the water. Hence we have good water pressure because the spring is several hundred feet higher up. Glad that Langley Burrell brought back memories.
ReplyDeletePeople in towns rarely understand the water systems in place in rural properties and are usually just happy with their taps ... as we are now. 😀 Back in Wales we had massively high water pressure as it came down from the top of the hill, right to our house. It necessitated a big valve and extra stop tap, on one occasion a new to the area plumber, removed it saying it was unnecessary, you can imagine the consequences. Let's just say we had no ceiling in our entrance hall for over a year while everything dried out. 🫤
ReplyDelete