Title 5 Inspection April 16, 2019 @goldenoakfarm

in homesteading •  6 years ago 

Title 5 test1 crop April 2019.jpg
Equipment arrives for the Title 5 Inspection

Early in March my husband went down to the Board of Health in town to see if there were any hoops for us to jump through before we started building the additions. They wanted a Title 5 inspection done on our septic system. They also said we had to have a minimum of 1500 gallon tank for 3 bedrooms.

The original tank, installed in 1983, was 1000 gallons. When we added on in 1993 my husband thought when they moved the tank (and part broke in the process) it was a 1500 gallon. If it was a 1000 gallon, we’d need a larger tank.

That wasn’t so bad. When they moved the tank in 1990 it had been nearly empty. When we put in the original in 1983, my father, the engineer who did the system, told us if we took care of the system, never put anything nasty down it, it should never need pumping.

So all these years we took meticulous care of it, never pumped it, and it had always been fine. So we were not expecting any problems with the inspection.

mound11.jpg

Here in Massachusetts, if your septic system doesn’t pass, they often make you put these huge mounds, especially if you are on flat ground. But as I said, ours had worked well for decades, so we weren’t expecting any problems.

New Herb - plants out for Title 5 crop April 2019.jpg

We knew the tank was at the edge of the New Herb garden, so we cleared an area for the inspection.

Title 5 test2 crop April 2019.jpg

They carefully cleared the soil away. The first trap opening they tried to open crumbled. My husband went to the local pipe supply to get a replacement. He came back empty handed, they don’t make them anymore.

The next trap opening came off fine and that inspection was fine. Then they dug out the D box. Unfortunately, it had deteriorated and was crumbling. But worse than that, it had too much water in it.

They next took off the cleanout trap opening, and it was obvious the entire system had failed. We’d need a whole new system. A regular system, like we’d had, started at $20,000. But if we had to have a pump system, they ran $20,000 – $50,000. This was not looking good….

So we called a recommended engineer and scheduled a perculation test, the first step. This would determine what sort of system we’d end up with.

Perk test1 crop April 2019.jpg

So another Kubota mini excavator arrived last Thursday. We hoped we could put a system next to the New Herb garden, on the west side, so that’s where he set up to dig the holes.

Big spruce comes down8 crop April 2019.jpg

We’d had the 2 spruce trees taken down the day before, so there was room for him to work. The trees were dying from a fungus and had been scheduled to come down this year.

The engineer said they may have to dig as many as 6 holes. But the Board of Health guy said he only wanted 2.

Perk test2 crop April 2019.jpg
The engineer taking soil samples

They are now required to record the layers of soil in the holes dug.

Perk test6 crop April 2019.jpg

They are graded by soil type and color. I think he recorded 5 layers in the holes. You can see our topsoil is about 16” deep here. He also recorded how wide the layers were.

Perk test5 Shawn Kimberly crop April 2019.jpg

Once he’d gotten that done, the hole was dug deeper, to 10’ I think, for the Board of Health guy to see.

Perk test4 Shawn Kimberly crop April 2019.jpg

This first hole was back filled and then a test hole dug into it.

Perk test8 crop April 2019.jpg

This is the actual “perc” test, determining how fast a set amount of water poured into this hole goes down in an hour.

While this was working, they dug the second hole, recorded layers, inspected and refilled it. The “perc” test went well from what the engineer said, draining quickly in our fine sandy loam. (Notice there’s no rocks to be found….)

It took about 3 hours until they were done. The excavator operator did a good job of putting things to rights. Next up was the surveying by the engineer so he could site it properly. Again, another wait, more limbo….

ha00148 crop.jpg
Surveying with a transit

The engineer came out and did an electronic survey on Monday morning. It sure was different from the way it was done in 1983. The engineer said he’d have an initial plan for us in a week. It came in yesterday.

Initial Septic Plan framed crop.jpg

It was as bad as we feared. There’s a pump chamber, a huge mound that will take out the last tree on the west side, plus 20’ of pasture. Not looking good, money wise.

So it’s being finalized, he said it would take him 6 hours, and he will send it to the excavator guy for a quote. So we are still in limbo….

Source:
Surveying: https://www.floridamemory.com/items/show/129265
Mound: http://www.morsecoinc.com/title-5-septic-specialist

Join Us on Discord. https://discord.gg/hPJs5Rb

Authors get paid when people like you upvote their post.
If you enjoyed what you read here, create your account today and start earning FREE STEEM!
Sort Order:  

Ugh. Sorry to hear. Septics have gone crazy up in New England, and for what? A bunch of cockamamy regulations that really don't do a whole lot.

Oh my goodness that is awful!!
I hope it ends up being easier and cheaper than expected, but ugh! Life sometimes throws curveballs, doesnt it?

We had really hoped all was well, as we'd never had trouble with it. But alas...