wildtoad wrote:
agesilaus wrote:
Use a in line filter on the fill hose. I assume this lake water has been checked by the county health dept. It seems to be an unusual water source.
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Many people who live on lakes pull water from them for both irrigation and household use. To your point, having the water tested periodically is a good idea. The same holds true for the millions of households the get their drinking water from a well. One should always use a filter at CG’s regardless of the water source. Never know when a water line may break.
Well water is wildly different from lake water.
The well actually functions as a filtration system. Any water that makes it to the well pump has filtered thru 30 or more feet of soil. There will typically be a test when the well is first put in (if it filters thru a layer of heavy metal that ain't good)...but after that, there is little benefit to further testing.
Pulling from a lake, guess where deer and bear poop washes after a rain? Plus you have fish, snails and all kinds of microbes. The water quality can change drastically over the course of the year. After a storm or spring snow melt can introduce significant amounts of contaminants. Hot weather can grow algae and other microbes.
If the water is actually safe, a simple sediment filter on the fill hose will do the trick for any residual sediment.