(719) 437-3741  •  Serving Southern Colorado
Free Water Testing Licensed & Insured
(719) 437-3741 Home Water Softener Installation Water Softener Repair Water Testing & Analysis Whole House Filtration Reverse Osmosis Systems Well Water Treatment About Contact Free Water Test

Falcon and Peyton Well Water Treatment

Hard Denver Basin aquifer water, iron staining, and nitrate risk from agricultural land — Falcon and Peyton wells have a lot going on. Start with a free test and know exactly what you're dealing with.

Falcon & Peyton Water: What You're Working With

Hard Denver Basin Water (10-20 GPG)

Falcon and Peyton sit on the eastern plains of El Paso County, drawing from the Denver Basin aquifer. Wells here routinely test 10-20 GPG — very hard water that causes significant scale on appliances, fixtures, and pipes. A properly sized water softener is the core of any treatment plan.

Nitrate Risk from Agriculture

Falcon and Peyton are surrounded by agricultural land. Fertilizers and livestock waste can introduce nitrates into groundwater. Nitrates above 10 mg/L are safe for most adults but dangerous for infants (can cause "blue baby syndrome"). Annual nitrate testing is recommended for all well owners in this area.

Iron & Manganese

Iron staining on sinks, toilets, and laundry is a common complaint in Falcon and Peyton. The Denver Basin aquifer here tends to produce water with elevated iron and manganese. An oxidizing iron filter upstream of your softener addresses the staining and protects the softener resin from iron fouling.

Annual Testing Recommended

With agricultural activity, older wells, and a complex aquifer, Falcon and Peyton well owners should test annually for bacteria and nitrates at minimum — with a comprehensive panel every 2-3 years. Conditions in rural wells can change; proactive testing is far cheaper than responding to a problem after the fact.

Well Water in Falcon and Peyton: A Complete Picture

Falcon and Peyton are among the fastest-growing communities in El Paso County — rural properties on large lots, entirely on private wells. The Denver Basin aquifer beneath this area produces consistently hard water, and the agricultural character of the landscape introduces nitrate risk that urban well owners don't typically face.

Hardness: The Primary Challenge

At 10-20 GPG, Falcon and Peyton well water is firmly in the "very hard" category. For context, water above 10.5 GPG is considered very hard by water quality standards — and Pueblo's municipal water at 10.5 GPG is considered one of the hardest city water supplies in Colorado. Many Falcon wells test harder than that. A correctly sized water softener is the foundation of any treatment plan here.

Nitrates: The Hidden Risk

Nitrates are colorless, odorless, and tasteless — you cannot detect them without testing. They enter groundwater from fertilizers, septic systems, and animal waste decomposition. The EPA maximum contaminant level for nitrates is 10 mg/L. For most healthy adults, levels below this pose no acute risk. However, for infants under six months, nitrates above this level can cause methemoglobinemia ("blue baby syndrome"), a serious condition that reduces blood oxygen levels.

If you have an infant in the home or are pregnant, nitrate testing is essential — not optional. An under-sink reverse osmosis system effectively removes nitrates for drinking and cooking water.

Building Your Treatment System

For a typical Falcon or Peyton home, we recommend starting with a comprehensive water test: hardness, iron, manganese, pH, TDS, nitrates, and bacteria. From there, a typical treatment system might include a sediment pre-filter, iron filter, water softener, and under-sink RO for drinking water. If bacteria are detected, UV disinfection is added. We build only what your water test justifies — not a standard package.

Water Treatment Questions for Falcon & Peyton

Is Falcon/Peyton well water safe to drink?
It depends on your specific well. Hard water at 10-20 GPG isn't a health risk for adults — it's a nuisance and an appliance problem. Nitrates and bacteria are the primary health concerns in this area. Testing your well annually for bacteria and nitrates tells you if there's a real safety issue. We recommend treating any well with an RO system for drinking water as a best practice.
What nitrate level is unsafe?
The EPA MCL for nitrates is 10 mg/L (milligrams per liter, same as parts per million). Above that level, infants under six months should not drink the water. For healthy adults, moderate nitrate levels above 10 mg/L don't typically cause acute symptoms, but long-term exposure at elevated levels has been associated with health concerns. Reverse osmosis effectively removes nitrates.
Do I need to treat for nitrates AND hardness?
If your water tests positive for both, yes — but different systems handle each problem. A water softener addresses hardness. An RO system addresses nitrates (and hardness minerals too, as a bonus). They work together well: the softener protects your home plumbing and appliances; the RO gives you clean drinking water.
How do I know if my well is contaminated from neighbors' activities?
You don't — without testing. Groundwater flows and agricultural contamination don't respect property lines. A well 500 feet from a feedlot or fertilized field can show nitrate contamination; another well right next to it might not, depending on depth and local geology. The only way to know your well's status is to test it independently.

Know What's in Your Falcon Well

Free in-home test covers hardness, iron, pH, and TDS. We can also arrange lab testing for nitrates and bacteria. Start with the data.

Schedule Free Test