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On Oct 26, 10:49 am, Gene Kearns
wrote: On Fri, 26 Oct 2007 12:51:59 -0000, penned the following well considered thoughts to the readers of rec.boats: | |Wow! Like I said, in western NY you can get very good water at 20 in |most valley areas. Incredible! Around here 20 feet would only get you the effluent of the neighbor's septic tank. Locally, most wells are 200-250' and just northwest of where I work, 1000' wells are fairly common! -- Grady-White Gulfstream, out of Oak Island, NC. Homepagehttp://pamandgene.idleplay.net/ Rec.boats at Lee Yeaton's Bayguidehttp://www.thebayguide.com/rec.boats -----------------www.Newsgroup-Binaries.com- *Completion*Retention*Speed* Access your favorite newsgroups from home or on the road ----------------- The dug well was there when we bought the house. FHA said that I had to drill a well so I sold my Jeep and started calling drillers. In the mean time I had my water tested and it was fine so I wrote a letter to the commish in hartford and told him that if I was made of money I would not be looking for a FHA loan! Along with the lab results and other info available. To everyones surprise he a(commissioner) agreed and waived the new well. My liar, the real estate agents, a few folks at FHA and even the loan company were floored, to the point where a couple of them asked me to give them copies of the letter to use for other clients and such, telling me they had never seen a well waived. I did have to sign a responsibility release form for the FHA that they were not responsible for the well. It's been a little over 20 years so I guess I got a good reprieve as a young homeowner, time to pay the piper. Followup. I am waiting for the local officials to do a little research for me. It is not their responsibility, but I know most of them and they know I am not currently resident so they are checking some maps and such. Another friend whos family has been around for generations I got in contact today told me he thinks that if I move my well from the front of the property to the back I can avoid about 150 feet of ledge and pound through 60 or so feet of clay and hit a gravel aquafur (sp?). Of course he can't promise me anything, but he is going by what he knows about the area. So anyway, anywhere from 60 to 200 feet, and a long lead time because there is a lot of this going around according to all the drillers I am talking to. My tennants are long time friends and real troopers, lucky for me, this could have gotten pretty ugly.. Anyway, good luck to all, spare your water ![]() |