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We need water.

Of all the various hurdles and obstacles we’ve overcome to build a house in the middle of nowhere, this is possibly and probably (please God let it be) the last great challenge. The well guys came out yesterday morning with their big drilling rig and two little pieces of wire.
Steve-the-Builder told me they were coming. “They’re going to witch a well,” he said.
I said, “Oooh! I want to see that!”
He said, “I figured you’d seen that before.”
I said, “Yes, because they do that ALL THE TIME IN THE SUBURBS.”
Sometimes I don’t think he understands me.

Of course, I had to try this out for myself. (Why do I have SO MUCH HAIR?! Don’t look at my hair. Okay, I’m pretending you’re not looking at my hair, so we can go on.)
The water witcher tried to train me. The little wires didn’t move or anything when I was holding them.
I said, “This doesn’t work. You’re making this up.”
The water witcher said, “You have to believe.”
I said, “I believe there’s not any water here.”

He said, “There’s water RIGHT HERE.”

So they brought their big rig over and started drilling.

And drilling.

There was a lot of standing around and watching the drilling.

The messy innards of the earth spewed out a pipe set across the creek. That’s my car in the corner. That seemed like a good place to park when I got there….. It’s a good thing I didn’t leave a window down or anything. Except I DID.

You can’t even see my car anymore. The smoky dust is kinda cool, though, isn’t it?

Like a movie set.
Maybe a scary movie set.
A movie called WE DRILLED 240 FEET AND THERE WAS NO WATER.
Yeah. THAT movie.
Except, like my car window being down, it was real.
And so we have to try, try again. I’m planning to take our puppy, Bluebell, over there, feed her a big can of dogfood, and let her run around. When she picks a spot to poop, that’s where we’re drilling the next well.
I figure that’s as good a method as any. You got any better ideas?
Posted by Suzanne McMinn on March 4, 2008
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Hope you can get a well drilled that will service you, and hope you have “good” water.
7:55
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I don’t know how it works, but as for me, I BELIEVE!
Good luck!
8:05
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I haven’t seen dowsing in action, but I’ve heard that some people can do it. Apparently this fellow needs a bit more practice! Or maybe he just doesn’t have the right “mojo.”
Good luck.
-Kim
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Letha
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I have a good friend (a teacher) who “witches” wells for family and friends. I have never known her to fail. She uses a willow forked twig. She believes you have to be born with the “gift” to witch. I have never heard of wire being used–I have no idea if that would make a difference or not.
Good luck and God bless your water hunt.
Martha
10:55
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Good luck finding water. You’d think as much as it rains it would be easy! But that’s different I guess.
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Let us know when you hit water.
(and you don’t have that much hair. Trust me.)
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I’m very glad you sacrificed your well for our amusement tho. And sorry about the car. I can’t imagine what that must look like.
Even though you are done with the drywall and on to the floor, I’m still inviting myself down some day.
Liked the picture of you!!
Maria
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I am glad I found your site so I can be prepared as we go along on this adventure of building in the middle of nowhere!
By the way, we have water witchers in these part, and yes, you must believe!
The Park Wife
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We had so many dry summers that we eventually hooked up to rural water so we didn’t have to be so careful.
Dh had a creepy water witching story about a guy he knew. I guess some folks can do it, but I think the puppy poop spot will work just as well.
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BW
PS We don’t have that problem “down the bayou”. Our water table is 3 feet down, anywhere you dig!!!
10:17
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We did the same thing you did, being new to this state back in the 70’s. We drilled 263 feet and hit nothing but dirt, not even rock. Then we decided to take a neighbor’s advice and use the spring. It was wonderful until the droughts in the 80’s. We drilled again in 1991, and went 723 feet before we hit water. It’s our $10,000 hole in the ground. But we have LOTS of water. If your house is on a ridge, in this county (next door to you), you can expect to drill from 600 to 800 feet or more to get good water.
What you need to do now is drill a gas well and get free gas! Our well is in, but we haven’t hooked up to the gas yet.
12:13
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First, the disclosure: I don’t know a thing about the geology in or around your property, hence nothing about the process of actually finding water there. I’m located just NE of Seattle WA, so, things are probably different
Personally, I believe the sticks move….that’s it. I’ve witched my own wells, I’ve witched other peoples wells, and come to that dramatic conclusion: the sticks move. Often, they seem to move where I set the rig up over a big boulder, or where there’s water….at 600 feet. But, not when there’s water at 40 feet…go figure.
One thing I have learn though – unless there’s actual hard evidence supporting the movement of a bore hole – i.e you’re at 250ft of depth, but every neighbor for 50 miles is at 100 feet with water….then don’t move the hole! You’re just drilling the same stuff up that the last hole drilled up – thereby wasting money. In less words; ‘Drill to the water’.
Oh, and tell those guys to put some hard hats on.
Just my two cents
Good luck! Like the pictures too.
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