JPRambo
Platinum Member
300 feet of thin wall PVC from their truck mounted pump and a flex hose into your tank?
Replacing a 90 ft. bridge could be in the $100,000+ cost range.
I do not see that as a realistic solution.
I had mine pumped for the first time after about 30 years. We have always used "Riddex" type enzymes and hardly had any hard scum layer.
Does Riddex really work? Have heard both ways on this.
Over a river that's always flowing and at least 3' deep all the time or more of a creek? If the latter, cut a crossing through and they just have to come during drier weather.
There were different brands of enzymes throughout the years and they seemed to help. Being in this cold climate, anything that keeps your septic tank warm, alive and working is a necessity. If they pump our septic tanks late in to the fall or winter they will add some special, hot enzymes to help keep the tank working until it is full again and functioning normally.
Interesting... around here (mild climate) I have always been advised that no additives are necessary. Just keep chemicals out and minimize paper and sink disposal wastes (compost) and the tank should biodegrade just fine. Oh yeah, and no small toys!There were different brands of enzymes throughout the years and they seemed to help. Being in this cold climate, anything that keeps your septic tank warm, alive and working is a necessity. If they pump our septic tanks late in to the fall or winter they will add some special, hot enzymes to help keep the tank working until it is full again and functioning normally.
Interesting... around here (mild climate) I have always been advised that no additives are necessary. Just keep chemicals out and minimize paper and sink disposal wastes (compost) and the tank should biodegrade just fine. Oh yeah, and no small toys!
Interesting... around here (mild climate) I have always been advised that no additives are necessary. Just keep chemicals out and minimize paper and sink disposal wastes (compost) and the tank should biodegrade just fine. Oh yeah, and no small toys!
Like I said earlier, it should be just a matter of the septic tank company bringing more hose. The guys that did my neighbor's, brought a separate vehicle with extra hose. He probably paid extra (I didn't ask him) but to me that would be far more desirable than monkeying around some non traditional way.The length of hose run must be what is putting the guys off-300’ is an awful lot of 3” hose to carry on a pumper truck-the guys that pump my holding tank run about 50’ or thereabouts with a vertical lift of about 15’ ( vertical lift being the most significant issue for a vacuum truck).
Personally, I’d go the small ports-potty pumper route with a hose and sprayer to wash down the sludge while pumping. Unless you can talk a pumper truck into bringing an extra hose truck or two to get you to the 300’ you need- he may or may not need a boost pump to deal with friction loss over 300’ of pump out hose.
Replacing a 90 ft. bridge could be in the $100,000+ cost range.
I do not see that as a realistic solution.

he said small bridge, not a 90 foot span. A small bridge can be 5 feet to whatever. But 90 feet is not a small bridge. Heres a thought, move the septic tank. Make the 1st tank pump to a new tank closer to bridge. Better yet, pump it into neighbors tank :cool2:My eye for detail seems to be going downhill. I missed that part in the OP. In my brain, it was a much smaller bridge.![]()