Brownish or dirty looking water can be caused by many things. Practically always after you shock-chlorinate your well the water turns brown. The chlorine used to shock the well reacts with iron, manganese and reducing bacteria in the well and it is pulled into the water chlorine solution. That is the brown you see. Flushing the well by running the hoses for at least 12 hours or upto several day will clear up the problem. Don't panic, it is completely normal. Though the other major causes of brownish or dirty water are:
- Surface infiltration or other contamination
- Well collapsing or water level dropping
- Iron (and/or manganese) in the water
- Iron Bacteria
- Earthquakes
- Rust or breakdown of the metals in in the well or house
What you are seeing is the gunk that had accumulated in your well. During well disinfection, free chlorine is introduced into the well water; there is no one standard for how much chlorine and methods to accomplish this disinfection so what your experience is will vary, but adequate amounts of chlorine will flush the mineral build up, iron in solution in the water and reducing bacteria out of the well. Based on a survey of emergency disinfection protocols performed by Dr. Kelsey J. Pieper et. al and published earlier this year “Improving state-level emergency well disinfection strategies in the United States”,the scientists found that there were many differences in the protocols for chlorine disinfection.
Most protocols recommended that high chlorine doses be
introduced into the well, circulated throughout the system, and stagnated for
several hours up to 24 hours. The scientists point out that it is important
that residual chlorine be measured because if too much of the chlorine solution
reacts with iron or organic substances present in the well the effectiveness
for disinfection is reduced. This is key because when iron or iron bacteria or other reducing
bacteria react with chlorine (are oxidized) and are flushed out of the well
into the water. If there is enough chlorine, the well will shed brown water, and be disinfected.
Chlorination properly done can not only disinfect, but also rehabilitate the well. As a water well ages, the rate at which water can be pumped (commonly referred to as the well yield) tends to fall. This can be caused by:
- Incrustation from mineral deposits (including iron and manganese) or
- Bio-fouling by iron bacteria
The most common methods to rehabilitate a private water
well are: acids or chlorine to dissolve the encrusting materials and bacterial
slime from the well. This produces the brown water observed in a newly chorine
shocked well. The chlorination dissolves the encrustations and slime build up. These
days regularly treating a well with chlorine is the recommended strategy to
extend the life of a well and equipment and can improve the taste of the water.
See well maintenance tips from Penn State University Extension or Alberta Provencal
Government.
When I recently replaced my pump and pressure tank, I used a heck of a lot of chlorine in the powder form (a couple of cups or more of high-test calcium hypochlorite) to sanitize the well. Unfortunately, I was not able to mix the chlorine adequately. Mixing the chlorine is accomplished by recirculating the water for a couple of hours. The result was that after running the hoses for about 12 hours the water appeared clear, but still had a measurable but low levels of chlorine. So, I need to keep diluting the chlorine solution by pumping the well to rid my well of it. Pockets of discolored water kept appearing for several days. Though I cannot run my well dry-it recharges faster than I can pump, I only ran the hoses only about 6-12 hours a day whenever a pop of rust colored water appeared. It would still be almost 5 days before all trace of the chlorine was flushed from the system, and the water remained consistently clear, but we were good with filtered water for coffee until then.
This was the longest it has ever taken to flush all the gunk
out of the well which I attribute to not mixing the chlorine adequately. My
husband, was briefly worried that I had somehow ruined the well or water
supply because it seemed to go on and on. No worries, by the next week the water was clear and tasty. It takes patience to clear a well.
Thanks so much for your post! We're in the process of shocking our old well so it's comforting to hear about someone else's shared experience.
ReplyDeleteI thought i messed something up. Your article was the only one that said it was normal. Makes sense. I thought during the circulating process i stirred up too much sediment
ReplyDeleteAppreciate the time you took to post this. Best info I've found. Just shocked our new to us but old well. Wasn't prepared for the tinted water
ReplyDeleteExactly the answer I was looking for. We just shocked our well for the first time and the brown water has made me very jumpy.
ReplyDelete