Nov 20, 2018 | 22:26
1
Sorry if I’ve posted in the wrong section. I just bought my first farm and have a lagoon. I’ve talked to a few farmers and one guy says to keep the area where the sewage comes out free of ice. Another farmer said to leave the lagoon freeze over as that is the way it is supposed to go and not to worry. Opinions please. I don’t want any backup
Sorry if I’ve posted in the wrong section. I just bought my first farm and have a lagoon. I’ve talked to a few farmers and one guy says to keep the area where the sewage comes out free of ice. Another farmer said to leave the lagoon freeze over as that is the way it is supposed to go and not to worry. Opinions please. I don’t want any backup
I assume the discharge is under the ice (or surface water level) a ways isn’t it?
Anyway, just let it freeze, but remember it is not normal ice and won’t be the same thickness as a fresh water dugout ice.
If you are concerned about that particular lagoon best would be to ask the previous owner if you can.
Nov 21, 2018 | 09:08
3
We had our lagoon freeze thick and had a backup in the house 2 yrs ago..First time ever..
Ours is covered with plywood and tin..So after that episode we now use a aeration pump running 24/7 to keep a hole open to make sure the water can keep getting above the ice and not freeze solid..
Check clean outs ever few days to make sure its not backing up..Got a new basement out of insurance but sure was no fun..
We had our lagoon freeze thick and had a backup in the house 2 yrs ago..First time ever..
Ours is covered with plywood and tin..So after that episode we now use a aeration pump running 24/7 to keep a hole open to make sure the water can keep getting above the ice and not freeze solid..
Check clean outs ever few days to make sure its not backing up..Got a new basement out of insurance but sure was no fun..
Thanks for the reply. I guess that’s what I’m wondering is do you let it freeze over and let the sewage water push the ice up or do you have a spot open in the ice all winter long so that a sewage can go above the ice? Thank you
Thanks for the reply. I guess that’s what I’m wondering is do you let it freeze over and let the sewage water push the ice up or do you have a spot open in the ice all winter long so that a sewage can go above the ice? Thank you
I’ve heard if you keep a spot open then the sewage will go above the ice and re-freeze and will create thicker ice which will eventually freeze the sewage pipe then you’ll get sewage back up. I’m not finding anything on the net and just want to understand the best way to go. Thx
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