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Cattle Boards
Health & Nutrition
Watering at remote locations
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<blockquote data-quote="Dave" data-source="post: 1588664" data-attributes="member: 498"><p>My friend in South central Washington has a couple of drilled wells that are 200 feet or so deep with solar pumps. He has 3 or 4 troughs set in a series where the over flow runs to the next trough Here it is mostly developed springs. None of them run very fast. A decent one will do half a gallon a minute. But with an 800 gallon trough it will keep it full or close. It is pretty amazing the springs the old timers found and developed. I have five on my property. Six if you count the one that feeds the house. There are also some big old dry troughs scattered around. There must have been a spring that ran there at one time or another. On the BLM just west of me there are four troughs set in a series fed from one spring. It must be a mile from the spring to the last trough.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Dave, post: 1588664, member: 498"] My friend in South central Washington has a couple of drilled wells that are 200 feet or so deep with solar pumps. He has 3 or 4 troughs set in a series where the over flow runs to the next trough Here it is mostly developed springs. None of them run very fast. A decent one will do half a gallon a minute. But with an 800 gallon trough it will keep it full or close. It is pretty amazing the springs the old timers found and developed. I have five on my property. Six if you count the one that feeds the house. There are also some big old dry troughs scattered around. There must have been a spring that ran there at one time or another. On the BLM just west of me there are four troughs set in a series fed from one spring. It must be a mile from the spring to the last trough. [/QUOTE]
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