Lou your knowledge and understanding is amazing. You explain things so people like me who has no set knowledge about springs can understand. Love how you seek advice from different people and the respect you give them. Cannot wait for the next adventure!!! ❤
@WildWeRoam3 күн бұрын
This makes us so happy to read ❤ we are always so grateful to have you along for the ride encouraging us the whole way!!
@chrisdaniel13393 күн бұрын
The amount of flow you have (looks like about 3/4 gallon per min or 1,080 gal/day) coming out of the poly pipe by the driveway is more than enough to support 2-3 homes and gardens. Dig a deep hole and put a sizeable cistern (6,000-10,000 gallons) in the hole that has the top of the cistern below the frost level in your area (48"), for added safety set the top of the tank 6 ft below the surface. By having a large cistern it will allow you to bridge any drought times, even severe drought without worry. Place a submersible pump in the cistern to pump water to the house/ shipping containers. You may also consider adding an ozone generator to the tank for sanitization without chemicals, then add a UV light sanitizer in the home sized for double the flow rate you expect. There needs to be an overflow pipe from the cistern that has a trap just like a sink drain and to be safe a stainless steel mesh screen, both the trap and screen will keep animals and insect from accessing the cistern by coming in the overflow pipe and contaminating it. The first spring you developed is a great on it just needs a tank and you have a bulletproof water system.
@WildWeRoam3 күн бұрын
thank you so much for this advice!! will definitely pass this on to Lou :) hope you have a great start to your week, Chris!!
@wyntersynergyundignified2 күн бұрын
So much to consider! Thanks for sharing your processes, successes and not-so-successful endeavors. I always learn so much even when it’s not something I’m likely to do myself.
@sgrvtl718317 сағат бұрын
Wonderful and very informative video, I liked walking around your property to the various spring sites. Thank You~💚
@sofiaadelinaaa12 сағат бұрын
I’d love to see a video testing the water!!
@tishhumphrey1319664 күн бұрын
I've been following for years. Your videos are ALL fantastic and informative.
@WildWeRoam4 күн бұрын
Yay, thank you so much! I'll be applying all these lessons soon once I start the next big spring project if the weather cooperates! --Lou
@emmamorgan71713 күн бұрын
What a great informative video - makes me want to get outside and start playing in the mud... I mean digging! Loved seeing the wildlife visiting. Stay warm you guys. :) 💗
@WildWeRoam3 күн бұрын
Thanks so much, Emma :) super happy to read that!! thanks for spending some time with us today :)
@Peachlover3454 күн бұрын
Your videos are so informative
@WildWeRoam4 күн бұрын
Yay, thank you! Been learning so so much about spring development lately, though the challenge is the people seem to say completely opposite things ; ) --Lou
@JB-eg1tb3 күн бұрын
Regarding the excavator, good on ya for placing your trust on the local folks with first hand experiences in your area instead of the keyboard experts :)
@WildWeRoam3 күн бұрын
thank you :) "keyboard experts" that is so funny, havent heard that before!
@JB-eg1tb3 күн бұрын
@@WildWeRoam : )
@trinitybrian28073 күн бұрын
Ive been drinking spring water for 12 years. Only filters are the rocks, the spring pipes are wrapped in weed cloth, then a culligan under the house (barely need that). Ive put my water in blind taste tests in groups of high end commercially bottled water. My spring water beats all brands as favorite tasting among those sipping. I would not consider UV, or anything else at this point. Simple is good.
@tylerbarrett66524 күн бұрын
I'm looking forward to your ram pump design. I'm still trying to figure out how it works. I guess you'll need a reservoir of some kind near the top of your property... I mean, you need a place to put all the spring water you are capturing.
@WildWeRoam4 күн бұрын
Yeah I'm still trying to figure it out as well ; ) the variable flow rate and winter freeze make it a little challenging! -- Lou
@tylerbarrett66524 күн бұрын
@@WildWeRoam - Well... a cistern then rather than a reservoir... and yeah, that excavator will come in handy! lol
@CallMeLexis4 күн бұрын
my sunday pastime is watching your vids :)
@WildWeRoam3 күн бұрын
aw Lexis, that truly warms my heart up to read!! thank you, you dont know how encouraging that is :) hope you had a really nice sunday!
@AdventureHunter.3 күн бұрын
If you have a good spring higher up, could you build a mini reservoir and damn system with a small turnbine for power production? It could free your options up for house build locations if you only had to run cable rather than rely on sunlight, or at least give you more more piece of mind during the darker winter months.
@earthangel87304 күн бұрын
I learned a "thang". Thanks.
@WildWeRoam4 күн бұрын
Yahooooo!
@trinitybrian28073 күн бұрын
In my area, we look for ferns, maple trees, and alders to find water close to ground.... High altitude desert (heavily forrested) in Nor Cal
@JKMA8183 күн бұрын
You all are so incredibly Happy Thanksgiving 🦃
@WildWeRoam3 күн бұрын
aw thank you ❤ happy thanksgiving to you, too!
@UltraXD.2 күн бұрын
Very interesting video. I’m just wondering how you guys are still going accomodate the local ecosystems water needs if your going to harvest most of the water and use it to drink? It was very cute seeing those bears and deer drinking all the water so I’m curious to know how’ll you’ll still allow water into the ecosystem😀👍
@ilzitek24194 күн бұрын
Thank you!
@Candlesinthewoods4 күн бұрын
We use the Berkey method. Our water is from a lake. So far. So good. :).
@WildWeRoam3 күн бұрын
thanks for sharing your experience, glad to hear its working well for you :)
@Candlesinthewoods3 күн бұрын
@ ❤️
@nataliej823 күн бұрын
Bears love trail cameras. Ask me how I know... 😏😂
@WildWeRoam3 күн бұрын
haha why do the trail cameras look tasty?
@vickiv3544 күн бұрын
Maybe you should have had a well dug
@WildWeRoam4 күн бұрын
Hahahah yeah, that would be easier. We actually already have an old one that came with the land, super high iron content and a casing that's not protected from freezing, but if we need to make that work we will. -- Lou
@trinitybrian28073 күн бұрын
I developed springs, and then had a well drilled. I used the well for 2 years and went back to springs. I also had a higher than wanted iron in the well water, none in the springs. Made it through the worst CA droughts w my hand dug springs
@veritanuda3 күн бұрын
Honestly, I was kind peopled why you did not drill a well in the first place. There is very little difference between the water. But your land, your choice. Thanks for sharing.
@takahiroyoshiyuki4 күн бұрын
“Spring development” sounds like ignoring the fact that you need a proper well dug. Wasted time and money when you can be doing other things
@xXSoonexXx4 күн бұрын
How much money and time would it be to drill a well inside a forest with elevation, without a proper road to it?
@takahiroyoshiyuki4 күн бұрын
@ 🥴🚩
@xXSoonexXx4 күн бұрын
@@erin3 I'm curious. Did you ever drilled a well in an remote location or have experience that is applicable here? Or you just know it better like everyone on the internet does?
@jeremykamel96553 күн бұрын
Well water can be just as good as or better then spring water. Well are generally less prone to contamination and bacteria from surface sources. I live on an island and our well water has won several awards for best tasting water. You can safely develop a spring but it takes forethought. Another option is digging your own well, if it’s legal in your area. Some states and local jurisdictions allow wells to be dug by the property owners to a limited depth.
@mcooper59293 күн бұрын
Disagree My grandparents farm in W Virginia supported them and their family for years and years with a spring. Later in life they added a cistern to fill up for dry months.
@farhanazmi52783 күн бұрын
Finally something worth watching on KZbin!! Cheers bud 🫶🏻 btw what’s the song title (the one played with animal footages)