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TIL about drain fields. In my country there's a govt agency to take care of cleaning out your septic tank every 2 years, so I never needed to know what was going on.
You mentioned that the drain field had gotten saturated. If you had done maintenance / repairs, what would the solution have been do deal with the saturation?
If they had done the maintenance, the drain field would likely not need to be replaced. One of the purposes of the septic tank is to contain solids that the ecosystem inside of the tank can not break down (like wet wipes). It periodically needs sucked out, and people don't realize this. Once it is full of insoluble material , that material starts going out into the drain field and depositing into the dirt. Eventually turning the dirt into something like clay, that can't really help spread out the excess water and allow it to evaporate.
Disclaimer: Just a person researching a future septic system, not professional advice.
Someone flushes a wet wipe into your septic tank? Justifiable homicide.
I don't know of a way to clean/maintain a drain field.
From what I understand the tank captures the solids and the liquids rise to the top after everything settles and goes through a series of small tubes to drain into a field and be filtered through the soil.
Then the tanks gets cleaned every 2-3 years to remove the built up solids.
Usually the series of tubes in the deain field are all underground and inaccessible so I don't think there is a way to clean or maintain them.
When we had our house inspected the plumber couldn't even locate the drain field. Just told us it switched in this part of the yard or that part of the yard.
Your country must have some awesome nicknames for that government agency.
It literally translates to 'Beautiful Water'. Can't get more poetic than that.