Dumping salt water into septic, don't want to ruin well water

warrenmichaels

New member
I live in a house on a mild hill which slopes from the front to the house to the back. I have no idea what sort of subterranean slopes there are, or what the subterranean geology is like, however. In the front, there is a well which is drilled, I think, to several hundred feet. In the back there is a septic field. I'm setting up a 90 gal tank. With water changes, this comes out to my emptying about 130 lbs of salt onto the property per year.

I had the groundwater tested, and NaCl is extremely low, and I'd like to keep it that way. Are any of you in a similar situation? If I empty the saltwater down the drain, do you think I'd ruin my groundwater?

Thanks
 
It will be fine. A much larger concern is the other substances and life in the effluent. If you’re that concerned about the salt, dumpyour water change buckets on the driveway or other non crop area.
 
I live in a house on a mild hill which slopes from the front to the house to the back. I have no idea what sort of subterranean slopes there are, or what the subterranean geology is like, however. In the front, there is a well which is drilled, I think, to several hundred feet. In the back there is a septic field. I'm setting up a 90 gal tank. With water changes, this comes out to my emptying about 130 lbs of salt onto the property per year.

I had the groundwater tested, and NaCl is extremely low, and I'd like to keep it that way. Are any of you in a similar situation? If I empty the saltwater down the drain, do you think I'd ruin my groundwater?

Thanks

I wouldn't worry. You probably dump a lot more than 130lbs of fresh water a day. An average house hold use 80-100 gallons of water a day, which is 660 to 830 lbs of water. Amount of salt that goes in with that much of water is very small.
 
Shoot, my water softener goes thru at least 40 lbs of salt a month. There might be a small impact on the lifespan of the drain field from calcium, but the salt won't be an issue.
 
Ive read up on this a lot since moving to a town with septic, and the majority of info I read is not to dump saltwater or put the drain line to your RO unit into the septic
 
If you have water flow going from your septic to your well water you have more urgent problems than your aquarium :)

Not a good idea to put large amounts of salt into a septic field, although if you do it during or following heavy rains its unlikely to cause any problems.

I like pouring SW on my long dirt/gravel driveway. Put the plant killing properties to good use.
 
Ive read up on this a lot since moving to a town with septic, and the majority of info I read is not to dump saltwater or put the drain line to your RO unit into the septic

I think that's mostly about the potential for the salt to accelerate corrosion of the concrete tank. I've been putting old SW into mine for close to 20 years without issue (at least that's what my septic guy says). My well is close to 400 feet deep - I figure the water I get from it hasn't seen the light of day for a very long time.
 
Saltwater is bad for the bacteria in septic tanks, bad for the bacteria in water treatment plants, and bad for the plants and bacteria in septic fields.

But during a rain, there is a constant flow of water into the septic field and you could get away with it.

I have no idea what people in cities should do (other than move :) ) I suspect storm drains are the best bet.
 
When I lived in my old house we had city sewage. I just dumped all the saltwater down the toilet. Now in this house I dump it all into the woods
 
This is one of my concerns as we start to build the retirement farm house. I've thought about running waste water to an evaporation tank and reclaiming the salt. Anyone ever use to make salt licks/supplements for livestock?

Note, my concern is for the septic system--not ruining the well water. Your well water comes from an aquifer deep underground (164ft for mine) and it is likely that the surface water on your property does not make it into that aquifer--at least at the point where you draw water (unless the top barrier rock layer is fragmented in some way).
 
That's good to hear regarding surface water not making it to the well. I'd considered setting up evaporation tanks as well. A few points from the research I did:

In most places in North America, in the Summer, as a rule of thumb, expect 0.5" vertical inches of evaporation per day.

You can boil away 400-800 gallons of water by burning a cord of wood, depending on efficiency.

If you freeze saltwater, at higher temperatures at least, you'll get a layer of freshwater on top, and saltier water below.

I live in the Northeast. Around here, plants are better suited to acidic soils. High pH water might not be good for them. You might want to neutralize pH.
 
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