You hit the main reason for me!wish I was further away from Brampton.
Edit - what's "r/o for drinking water"?
You hit the main reason for me!wish I was further away from Brampton.
Reverse Osmosis. Very good for removing impurities but the water tastes flat and lifeless. You can add minerals back in after R/O to make your own custom "spring water".You hit the main reason for me!
Edit - what's "r/o for drinking water"?
Getting test results before an offer would be tough (but not impossible, take a sample while you are looking at the house). That gives you composition but not flow rate. It would be kind of a dick move to run the flow rate test during your walkthrough as it wastes a ton of water.As everyone has been saying, inspections are key. If it was me, I'd make sure to have a professional inspection of the septic system and a flow test of the well before making an offer. When you visit this weekend make sure to walk around the back yard looking and feeling for soft spots or places where the grass is noticeably greener or thicker. Those could indicate that wastewater is not flowing evenly throughout the weeping bed, either because of a collapsed/blocked pipe or an improperly installed diverter in the tank that is sending more water to one pipe than the others.
I'd also have the raw well water tested for metals/micro/hardness, either before you make an offer or fairly soon after you move in. That way you know if you actually need any fancy filtration equipment. Make sure you collect the sample BEFORE the water goes through any filters or water softeners for the most accurate results. For the love of all things Holy, please don't have your water tested by a company that sells water treatment equipment! Just do it yourself.
It shouldn't cost more than maybe $100-200 to get the full suite of tests. Basic micro testing for e.Coli is provided for free by the Simcoe/Muskoka Health Unit, but getting more detailed analysis will help you make the best decisions for your own health and also the health of the house's plumbing system.
My company does industrial water testing and we use Bureau Veritas for our lab work. There are other labs in the GTA including SGS and AGAT. Give one of the labs a call and tell them you're looking to test the water at your new house.
My boss had them test the water at his new cottage last year and he found that the high maintenance and expensive filtration systems that the previous owner had installed were completely unnecessary. He also did a couple of rounds of testing just for hardness and sodium levels to figure out the proper dosages for the water softener.
Simple solutions I’ve seen in water tanks and cisterns.…. Would really like a reasonably priced system to monitor the water level in the cistern... for now we just check it with a dipstick if there's doubts
We have a well and a septic treatment plant. Be aware that if you end up with a house with a powered septic it needs inspected twice a year and you can't do that yourself. Cost about $600 yearly for inspections. If you don't get it inspected the health unit will come and fine you. On the well front we're lucky we have unlimited water we can pump from our well when they did the flow test they quit as they couldn't pull the water level down.Lived in the country twice, farm I grew up on had a natural spring on the Niagara escarpment, small pump and 20ft of pipe , septic was built into a field and was fine , well or septic had never been serviced in the eighty yrs my family had the place , my own house was seventy ft dug well and a big septic field , we had to be cautious as we did not have unlimited water , but always enough .
However I have had friends with well nightmares , septic problems and collapsed cisterns . Do due diligence , insist on inspections and if available permits and drawings . Trucking in water and digging up a system can ( will) cost thousands and then the inspections seem cheap .
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Good point on the golf course as 1 property is backing onto that.I've lost touch with drilling costs and wonder about policing ground water usage if a local golf course is sucking it dry. A few McMansions with acres of turf can also be a problem.
Internet/cell coverage is important. Starlink solves the internet issue for a few thousand a year.Everybody is overlooking the most important aspect of country living!
Do I have fiber optic cable so I can stream Netflix?
That is mostly just a money issue. Buy the more expensive roaming package and it works, it's just more money for slower speed.As others noted check cell and Internet availability. BTW Starlink is sold out in many rural places in Canada so don't take it for granted either.