We have never had much luck with root cellars. Back in the 1970’s when we bought our place there was a root cellar on it. It was a mostly an above ground root cellar that was shaped like a big loaf of bread. We found it more trouble than it was worth. In the winter, it was difficult to get into, with snow piled up in front of the door, which was often frozen shut. Then in the spring the floor would flood, due to the high water table where we live.
Once when I was burning the weeds that grew on the root cellar, the flames caught the cedar timbers supports that held up the root cellar, and the whole thing burned and collapsed. That was the end of that root cellar.
It is nice to have a cool place to store our garden produce during the winter, so when I was building an addition onto our house, I dug out and made a root cellar under our kitchen. I thought that would be handy and easy to get to, during the winter. We did use it a few years, but then it too started to flood during the spring. Eventually, we just quite using it.
When we put in our gravity feed water system, I ran the waterline into the root cellar, where I did all of the plumbing to the kitchen and bathroom. During that period of time, the root cellar remained dry for decades.
For a month now, our water pressure has been going down in the house, even through the water pressure in our waterline remained high. I figured that the water filter, which is in the root cellar, probably needed changing. When I opened the trap door to the root cellar to change the filter, I got quite a surprise.
There was two feet (60cm) of water in the root cellar. We have been getting an awful lot of rain, and I guess a lot of it seeped into the root cellar.
The water level in the root cellar was higher than the top of my boots, and too deep for me to change the water filter.
I did have a sump pump, so I thought I would use it to pump out the water. Luckily, the water level was not as high as the motor of the sump pump. I was able to rigged up the pump so that I could do everything from the kitchen, and not have to get down into the pool of water.
I discovered that the sump pump hose was too short to run out of the front door, as I had planned, so I had to run the hose out of the kitchen window. The hose was too short to get to the lawn, so I found an old plastic drain pipe to stick onto the end of the hose, allowing the pumped water to run all the way out onto the lawn. I had to rig up a chair and bench to support the hose and pipe to make it all work.
Although everything looked very jerry-rigged and ridiculous, it all functioned as I had hoped and I was able to pump out 20 inches of water from the root cellar.
Rural living can often be challenging.
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