Livingston
The Polk County seat sits along US 59/I-69, and city water lines cover most of the incorporated area. Just outside those lines, though, plenty of homes on larger lots still run private wells, especially toward the edges of town and along the older county roads. We service both the well systems just outside city limits and the acreage properties further out.
Onalaska
Onalaska sits at what locals call the heart of Lake Livingston, home to a number of lakefront subdivisions and planned communities, each with its own homeowners association. Cape Royale, one of the larger lake-area developments, sits nearby off FM 224, and Indian Springs Lake Estates covers a chunk of the shoreline closer to town. Wells in these subdivisions tend to be original to construction from the 1980s and 1990s, which puts a lot of them right in the age range where pressure tanks and pump motors start needing attention.
Point Blank
Point Blank sits on the western shore where Polk County meets the San Jacinto County line, and it has several waterfront subdivisions of its own, many centered around shared boat ramps and private roads. Waterwood is one of the well-known communities out this direction. Properties here often sit on lots with heavier weekend use than weekday use, which is exactly the pattern that runs pressure tanks and switches into the ground faster than steady daily use would.
Goodrich
Goodrich runs along US 59/I-69 and covers a mix of rural acreage, farms, ranches, and smaller lake-adjacent subdivisions off the FM roads leading toward the water. Wells out this way tend to run deeper than the newer drills closer to town, and older galvanized drop pipe is more common here than in the newer subdivisions ringing the lake.