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SEPTIC SYSTEMS HOME
SEPTIC SYSTEMS ONLINE BOOK

INSPECTING SEPTIC DRAINFIELDS
  SEPTIC FIELD FAILURE CAUSES
  DISPOSAL CLOGGING FAILURES
  DISPOSAL vs TREATMENT
  SEPTIC DRAINFIELD LIFE
  SEPTIC FAILURE CRITERIA
  SOIL CONDITIONS
  PLANTS OVER SEPTICS
     Gardens Near Septics
     Grasses or Flowers
     Grazing, Animals
     Ground Cover, Ivy
     Trees or Shrubs
     Using Root Killers
     Using a Roto Rooter
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PHOTO of a farm field outside Frankfort, Germany 1969 (C)DJ Friedman Planting a Garden Over or Near Septic System Components - an illustrated guide
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  • Gardening over or near septic system components
  • Advice for planting over or near septic systems
Our site offers impartial, unbiased advice without conflicts of interest. We will block advertisements which we discover or readers inform us are associated with bad business practices, false-advertising, or junk science. Our contact info is at inspect-ny.com/appointment.htm.

This chapter discusses the types of gardens or other plants that should or should not be planted over or near septic fields or other septic system components. This is a guide for homeowners who are planting trees, shrubs, gardens, ground cover, or other plants near a septic system and who need to know that can be planted near or over septic system components like the septic tank, distribution box, and drain field or soil absorption system. Planting the wrong things or in the wrong places can lead to the need for expensive septic system repairs. © Copyright 2008 Daniel Friedman, All Rights Reserved. Information Accuracy & Bias Pledge is at below-left. Use the links at page left to navigate this document or to go to Other Website Topics. Green links at left show where you are in our document & website.

Planting Fruit, Vegetable, or Ornamental Gardens Near or Over Septic Systems

Photo of our vegetable garden in Costa Rica.

The short answer is it's better to keep fruits and vegetables away from septic systems, especially septic drainfields. Planting a fruit or vegetable garden over or near septic system components raises some important questions:

  • Will there be pathogenic or chemical contamination of the soil (bacteria, viruses, cleaners) below the garden?
  • Will septic system pathogens enter in or contaminate fruits or vegetables planted over or near the septic system?
  • Will chemicals or salts passing through the septic system harm nearby plants?
  • Will the garden planting itself harm the septic system in some way?

The effectiveness with which the soil biomat is treating pathogens in septic effluent, the ability of the soil to filter effluent, the chemicals or salts entering the septic system, and the type of plants placed over or near the system are some of the factors that lead to answers to these questions. [The photograph above shows our vegetable garden gone wild in Costa Rica.]

  • Septic effluent contains chemicals and pathogens which are potentially unhealthy or harmful to people, animals, or plants. If a septic absorption system's biomat is functioning successfully, the level of these pathogens is reduced to that of typical surrounding surface water before effluent leaves the drainfield. The "safe" distances involved depend on the soil type.
  • Soil types affect how the septic system behaves and how it affects nearby plants of any kind. Clay soils release cleared effluent in perhaps a few inches but then clay doesn't perc well and is bad in general for a septic location. Sandy soils permit much greater travel of effluent and pathogens, certainly several feet. These "close" distances do not even consider what happens when the drainfield is not working well or is in failure. In that case pathogens may be released to the general environment and might travel any distance from the septic field.
  • Root crops such as carrots or potatos which develop in the soil are likely to pick up pathogens from effluen in the soil over, next to, or downhill from drainfield trenches or galleys.
  • Leafy crops such as lettuce or perhaps broccoli which develop above the ground but close to it may be contaminated by pathogens that splash up from the soil surface during watering or during rainfall.
  • Above ground crops that grow on a raised vine such as cucumbers, tomatoes, or peppers may fare better if they must be planted over or close to septic system components, since they are higher up and less likely to be contaminated by soil splash-up.
  • Salts and the septic system: Homes whose water supply is "hard" and which employ a salt-based water softener system are more likely to be passing high levels of salt into the septic drainfield. Not only does this salt risk harming the drainfield operation (mineral clogging or damage to the biomat) but such salts may also damage some plants that grow nearby.
  • Chemicals and the septic system: At this website we've advised strongly against use of "magic bullet" chemical or other septic treatments as some of them are toxic and environmental contaminants. Some of these may also contaminate your garden.
  • Gardening activities such as walking or digging into the first few inches of soil over a drainfield are not likely to damage it. But driving equipment such as a plow or rototiller over a drainfield or constructing a "raised bed" garden which requires the addition of soil above surrounding ground levels can damage the system or can reduce soil transpiration thus preventing the drainfield from functioning properly. Not "functioning properly" here means that the drainfield stops successfully treating the pathogens that flow into it. It stops working and begins discharging unsanitary effluent into the environment, and into your garden.

Use links just below or throughout our website links at the left of each page to navigate this document or to view other topics at this website. Green links show where you are in our document or website.

Links to articles on plants or animals over septic system components:
PLANTS OVER SEPTICS
   Gardens Near Septics
   Grasses or Flowers
   Grazing, Animals
   Ground Cover, Ivy
   Trees or Shrubs
   Using Root Killers
   Using a Roto Rooter

The Septic Systems Online Book - Where Are We?

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05/09/07 - 1/1/1995 www.inspect-ny.com/septic/fieldplants8.htm © Copyright 2008-1995 Daniel Friedman - all rights reserved