Understanding Your Water Well
Ground water is found beneath the earth's surface and is one of British Colombia’s most important
resources, supplying water to thousands of wells serving homes, industry and agriculture. In fact,
peace region is ranked in the Top 10 nationally for the number of private water wells drilled.
However, very few well owners know how to evaluate the efficiency of their well.
Drilled wells

Cable tool water well drilling rig in These slow rigs have mostly been replaced by rotary drilling rigs
Dilled wells can water from a much deeper level by mechanical drilling.
Drilled wells with electric pumps are currently used throughout the world, mainly in developing and
developed countries, typically in rural or sparsely populated areas, though many urban areas are
supplied partly by Municipal wells.
Drilled wells are typically created using either top-head rotary style, table rotary, or cable tool drilling
machines, all of which use drilling stems that are turned to create a cutting action in the formation,
hence the term 'drilling'. Most shallow well drilling machines are mounted on large trucks, trailers, or
tracked vehicle carriages. Water wells typically range from 20 to 600 feet (180 m), but in some
areas can go deeper than 3,000 feet (910 m).
Rotary drilling machines use a segmented steel drilling string, typically made up of 20-foot (6.1 m)
sections of steel tubing that is threaded together, with a bit or other drilling device at the bottom
end. Some rotary drilling machines are designed to install (by driving or drilling) a steel casing into
the well in conjunction with the drilling of the actual bore hole. Air and/or water is used as a
circulation fluid to displace cuttings & cool bits during the drilling. Another form of rotary style
drilling, termed 'mud rotary', makes use of a specially made mud, or drilling fluid, which is constantly
being altered during the drill so that it can consistently create enough hydraulic pressure to hold the
side walls of the bore hole open, regardless of the presence of a casing in the well. Typically,
boreholes drilled into solid rock are not cased until after the drilling process is completed,
regardless of the machinery used.
The oldest form of drilling machinery is the Cable Tool, still used today. Specifically designed to
raise & lower a bit into the bore hole, the 'spudding' of the drill cause the bit to be raised & dropped
onto the bottom of the hole, and the design of the cable causes the bit to twist at approximately 1/4
revolution per drop, thereby creating a drilling action. Unlike rotary drilling, cable tool drilling
requires the drilling action to be stopped so that the bore hole can be bailed or emptied of drilled
cuttings.
Drilled wells are typically cased with a factory made pipe, typically steel (in air rotary or cable tool
drilling) or plastic/PVC (in mud rotary wells, also present in wells drilled into solid rock). The casing
is constructed by welding, either chemically or thermodynamically, segments of casing together. If
the casing is installed during the drilling, most drills will drive the casing into the ground as the bore
hole advances, while some newer machines will actually allow for the casing to be rotated & drilled
into the formation in a similar manner as the bit advancing just below. PVC or plastic is typically
welded & then lowered the drilled well, vertically stacked with their ends nested & either glued or
splined together. The sections of casing are usually 20' or more in length, and 6" - 12" in diameter,
depending on the intended use of the well and local ground water conditions.
Surface contamination of wells in the Canada is typically controlled by the use of a 'surface seal'. A
large hole is drilled to a predetermined depth or to a confining formation (clay or bedrock, for
example), and then a smaller hole for the well is completed from that point forward. The well is
typically cased from the surface down into the smaller hole with a casing that is the same diameter
as that hole. The annular space between the large bore hole & the smaller casing is filled with
bentonite clay, concrete, or other sealant material. This creates an impermeable seal from the
surface to the next confining layer that keeps contaminants from traveling down the outer sidewalls
of the casing or borehole & into the aquifer. In addition, wells are typically capped with either an
engineered well cap or seal that vents air through a screen into the well, but keeps insects, small
animals, and unauthorized individuals from accessing the well.
At the bottom of wells, based on formation, a screening device, filter pack, slotted casing, or open
bore hole is left to allow the flow of water into the well. Constructed screens are typically used in
unconsolidated formations (sands, gravels, etc.), allowing water & a percentage of the formation to
pass through the screen. Allowing some material to pass through creates a large area filter out of
the rest of the formation, as the amount of material present to pass into the well slowly decreases &
is removed from the well. Rock wells are typically cased with a PVC liner/casing & screen or slotted
casing at the bottom, this is mostly present just to keep rocks from entering the pump assembly.
Some wells utilize a 'filter pack' method, where an undersized screen or slotted casing is placed
inside the well & a filter media is packed around the screen, between the screen & the borehole or
casing. This allows the water to be filtered of unwanted materials before entering the well & pumping
zone.
Design and build by ABE
Anderson water services
Hosting by Yahoo! Web Hosting
Anderson Water Wells
WATER WELLS
According to the World Health Organization, less than 1 percent of the world's fresh water
(or about 0.007% of all water on earth) is readily accessible for direct human use.

Source: WaterPartners International
A recent Web poll at
nationaldriller.com:
depth of the water
wells you've drilled
in the past year?

less than25feet--%5
26f-to-50f--%7
51f-to-75f--%3
76f-to-100f--%7
101f-to-150f--%11
151f-to-200f--%15
201f-to300f--%11
301f-to-400f--%19
401f-to-500f--%7
501-feet or more%17

source
www.nationaldriller.com
september 2007

did you know
891,863 square
kilometres is the
amount of space
covered by
Canada's fresh
water lakes,
ponds and
rivers. This
accounts for
approximately
9% of Canada's
total area.