Monday, August 26, 2024

Unpleasant Saturday

Saturday morning we already knew we had another heat wave to live through for a few days, but we're used to it.  The sun was shining, but I kept hearing distant thunder.  Around 8 o'clock or so, there came a crack of lightning that was obviously very close; Gabe jumped down from the couch and looked from me to Cliff, as though he thought we could control such things.  It was just that one sizzling, ear-bursting strike of lightning, then nothing but distant thunder again.  We got about four-tenths of an inch of rain, par for the course these days.

We also got a day with no running water.  That lightning had struck a big tree and ruined the pump at the bottom of a very deep well (more that a hundred feet), leaving Woodhaven Acres with two homes that had no way to bathe, wash dishes, or flush the commode.  The pump had to be pulled out, and then the grandson went to Feldman's in Blue Springs to buy a new pump for the well.  He is blessed to have that one friend he can count on to help him in the worst situations, things like pulling pumps, finding runaway cows that jump the fence, or digging septic tanks; and the two of them spent the day trying to get that pump to work, with Cliff doing the best he could to help them in spite of his age.  

The pump was a little different than what we have had in the past, and some time after noon, the boys gave up and Arick went and traded it for one that had the same kind of wiring as our old one:  They had to pull the pump again, but this time they had success, although it was getting dark when they finished.  I'm sure if you did a search of my blog for the word "pump", you would see other times we've had to buy pumps.  We've lived here fifty years, and messing around with all that mess is one of our worst nightmares.  At one time the original well started giving us sand with our water, and the only thing you can do for that is to have another well driven.  Expensive indeed!  

Cliff thinks the tree that was hit will likely die.  It really doesn't look that bad to me, but there's a place near the ground where the bark is gone and the dirt around the tree shows that the big tree actually moved in the ground.  A squirrel gave his life simply by being in the wrong tree.  I hope it's one of the squirrels that picked all my pears off the tree when they were still green!

So, life goes on, and we'll survive.  

10 comments:

  1. Anonymous7:01 AM

    Oh man! I hate it when that happens. At least it didn't set things on fire. Gary has had to go out where the well house was burned from a lightning strike. Oddly enough there was a freak storm here Saturday morning with a close lightning strike that took out our preacher's phone and Internet system.
    It was still down yesterday. Rebecca in SW MO

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  2. Anonymous7:47 AM

    There is no way I could ever allow myself to be lowered into a well. Guess I would have to start drinking/using bottled water.

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    1. Nobody gets in the well. it's about a 6-inch hole. LOL. Bottled water is a pretty high-priced thing to flush your toilet, but maybe you have more money than me. There are so many things city folks have no idea about.

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  3. I remember life with a well, except ours wasn't anywhere near 100 feet deep and it often ran dry every summer requiring trips out to the cornfield to do any business and hauling cooking/drinking water. As a kid I looked forward to it because it meant baths were few and far between for awhile.

    I'm not looking forward to this heat wave. It was hot when I walked my youngest to the bust stop after dawn this morning.

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  4. Anonymous8:50 AM

    All this, makes one really appreciate running water. I grew up carrying our water in a bucket. This taught me that water is precious. Dad finally sold lad to drill a well. 1000 feet down was were the pump sat. Water had Sulphur spell, but we still felt bless! You survived another trauma!

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    1. Our water tastes fine but has a lot of calcium. Years ago we left the outside water hydrant open in the cow waterer all night. I think at the lowest part of our land out back, there is water running out of the ground all the time. Might have something to do with the Missouri river, since some folks say there's an underground river.

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  5. Poor squirrel! Glad you weren't having a picnic under that tree! Can you connect to suburban water cheaper? Linda in Kansas

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    1. The last time we tried, they said we couldn't have it because there were too many people were on this line, whatever that meant.

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  6. I've never dealt with a well and it sounds like there are advantages and disadvantages to it. I wouldn't like having to fix it, that's for sure. But water plus sewer here can be costly.

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  7. I grew up with an artesian (sp?) well over 200 ' deep.....super cold in the summer time... best tasting water. Haven't had anything as good since!!

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