50 feet?
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Replying to @MorlockP
photo taken from the house? the perspective makes it seem like its far away from, well, anything.
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Replying to @Kenneth_St_Cyr
Photo taken from more or less same distance as house, but actually front yard Will send aerial view later, from desktop
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Replying to @MorlockP @Kenneth_St_Cyr
red square is the firewood red dot to the NE of the square is where wife stood to take picturepic.twitter.com/TUrXV3fN3t
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Replying to @MorlockP
Thanks..I was wondering what the limits are distance wise of the piping, and discovered it can be much further than I thought.
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Replying to @Kenneth_St_Cyr @MorlockP
One thing I dont know...is it recommended to be below frost line??
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Replying to @Kenneth_St_Cyr
Don't think so. Mine isn't that deep, I think. IF there's hot water in it, it's not going to freeze!
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Replying to @MorlockP
The concern I would think is movement, rocks can move quite a bit in the frost line..no?
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Replying to @MorlockP
Granted, the piping I saw in the video looked really rugged. And its not like you are going to dig a narrow trench where rocks are close. But we all know in NH how much rocks can move. I'm sure there are horror stories out there.
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at a guess the trench is dug oversized and filled w 1' or so of sand, then the pipes, then more sand, then topsoil at least, that's what I'd do, and it's what my guy did when I had a water line run to the greenhouse
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