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 Water Turn on Question 
		
		
		Any feel that turning on the water for the season this Friday is a going to be a problem. I do not believe so but my wife is questioning it from a freezing standpoint 
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 go for it!! 
		
		
		Looking at the extended two week forecast there aren't any temps that go below the high 30s... even if it did hit freezing overnight sometime, it wouldn't be enough to create a problem in your pipes... it would take an extended few hours well below 32 to actually freeze solid... and with the shorter nights, I can't believe that would happen before next fall... 
	Looking like 78 on Friday, might have to take my first dip in the water!! -PIG  | 
		
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 Water turn on 
		
		
		Happy Wife - Happy Life !! 
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 Our water is on til December....a lot colder then than it is now. Mine will be on Thursday, so I think you're good! 
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 Prior to moving here full-time, we always turned on Patriots Day weekend. In 20 years, with exposed pipes and no insulation, it was never a problem.  A few years I got nervous. But never had an issue. 
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 Turned our water on yesterday. The Lake is 36.83 degrees..Good luck with that swim…..I will join you in July!! 
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 It’s not a swim, it’s a cold plunge. Joe Rogen says they are good for you 
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 I’m a plumbing contractor and turned my outside water on this past weekend. 
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 While we're on the subject of seasonal plumbing....I was always able to drain the pipes in my 70 year old cottage by gravity. A couple of years ago the bathroom shower had rusted out to the point of needing to be totally replaced. The old shower had separate hot and cold faucets. The plumber would not replace them and insisted because of code that he had to put in a mixer valve for the hot and cold water ("so no one can be scalded"). OK, fine, despite the fact that for decades no one had been scalded from said shower. I learned the following season that gravity drainage of the shower was no longer possible, despite having left the mixer valve half way open. Water gushed forth from my mixer valve the first spring. This left me with 2 alternatives: remove the valve for the winter (a pain in the neck) or blow out the valve with forced air from my compressor. I have chosen the latter and no longer have problems. But I still miss my 70 y/o classic hot and cold water faucets. 
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 That’s how I do my bunk house plumbing. Attach a low pressure air supply to the pipes and turn handle until water stops spiting out 
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 Similar set up 60+ years old.  Everybody loves the old (non-restrictive) shower head and the soft lake water.  Always just gravity drained and left the valves open.  Once, about 30 years ago, I had a winter split in the 24" vertical pipe that runs from the valves to the shower head.  Taught my daughter how to solder in a patch and all OK again, but I never could figure out why we had a split in the first place in a drained vertical pipe. 
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 Faucet = Hose Bib... 
		
		
		I had a similar split in a vertical copper pipe. It led to an outside hose bib, but can't recall if I'd absent-mindedly closed the faucet.  :confused: 
	Maybe it was a cold north wind, but I didn't want to scare up the necessary hardware. Instead, I took a yarn from a nearby mop, and pressed it into the "breech". Using a Channel-Lock pliers from the opposite side. I then crushed the broken edges together on the yarn. Instead of "just getting by" for the next 24 hours, the "fix" lasted several years until a visiting plumber rejected my handiwork. :o I've saved my work product in spite of his disrespecting my provisional--but long-lived--repair. :look:  | 
		
 Aps--love our ingenuity. 
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