Drano In Septic Tank -
Inside that 1,200-gallon tank, a complex civilization of anaerobic bacteria worked around the clock. Their job was brutal but essential: to liquefy the solids (sludge) and break down the floating fats, oils, and grease (scum) before the clarified water trickled out into the leach field. This bacterial army was the only thing standing between the Wilsons and a catastrophic backup.
What Frank didn’t know was that his septic tank was not a sewer. It was not an infinite drain to a treatment plant. It was a miniature, self-contained digestive system—a concrete stomach buried in the backyard. drano in septic tank
The Slow Death of the Cedar Hollow System Inside that 1,200-gallon tank, a complex civilization of
The first few half-bottles only stunned the outer edges of the bacterial colony. The tank’s ecosystem had resilience; a few trillion microbes survived deep in the sludge layer. But after the eighth or ninth treatment, the pH in the tank shifted from a healthy 6.5–7.5 to a toxic 10.5. The heat from the chemical reaction killed off the sensitive Bacteroides and Clostridium strains first. Within 48 hours, the tank’s digestion rate fell by 80%. What Frank didn’t know was that his septic