No water at your place off the Wenatchee River? We fix well pumps in Cashmere the same day, often within a few hours. Free estimates, licensed and insured.
Cashmere sits in one of the prettiest stretches of the Wenatchee River valley, and a lot of homes here still run on the wells that came with the orchard. We work on those wells every week. Many were drilled decades ago for farmhouses along Mission Creek and up the canyon roads, and the pumps in them are well past their expected life. When one quits, you find out fast, because there's no city water main to fall back on.
The good news is that most Cashmere well problems are fixable in a single visit. Wells in this valley typically pull from river-deposited gravels or fractured rock in the foothills, and the water tends to run hard, which wears out pump motors and pressure switches over time. We carry the common pump sizes and tanks on the truck, so a repair or full pump replacement usually happens the same day you call.
Submersible and jet pump repairs for Cashmere homes and small orchards. We diagnose pressure switches, control boxes, and worn motors on site and fix what's actually broken.
When a pump on an older Cashmere farmhouse well finally gives out, we pull it, size the right replacement for your well depth and household, and have water back on the same day in most cases.
Waterlogged tanks and short-cycling pumps are common with the hard water in this valley. We replace failed bladder tanks and set the pressure right so your new pump lasts.
Lose water on a Sunday or during a February freeze in the canyon? Call us. Our emergency well service covers Cashmere around the clock.
A lot of Cashmere wells were drilled in the 1960s through the 1980s, back when the orchards were the whole economy here. Those wells are usually fine. It's the equipment in them that ages out. A submersible pump lasts 10 to 15 years on average, and we pull plenty in this valley that have run 20 or more.
Local water plays a role too. Wells in the gravel benches near the river often carry sand and mineral content that grinds away at impellers and clogs pressure switches. Up in the draws off the valley floor, wells drilled into fractured rock can run lower-yield, which makes pumps cycle harder. Both situations shorten pump life, and both show up as the same symptoms: sputtering taps, dropping pressure, or no water at all.
If your pressure has been fading slowly, that's worth a call before it becomes a no-water morning. A failing pump usually gives warning signs for weeks. Catching it early means a planned repair instead of an emergency, and our well pump cost guide gives you honest numbers before we ever show up.
Plenty of properties around Cashmere run two systems: a domestic well for the house and an irrigation pump for the trees or pasture. We service both. Summers here are hot and dry, and an irrigation pump that dies in July puts real stress on young trees fast. We treat those calls with the same urgency as a house with no water.
We also see a lot of converted orchard parcels, where someone bought five acres of old pears and the well setup is a mystery. We'll inspect the whole system, tell you what's domestic and what's irrigation, test the pump and pressure tank, and give you a straight answer on what needs work now versus what can wait.
We're based in the Wenatchee area, so Cashmere is a quick run up Highway 2 for us. Most service calls in town, along the river, or up Mission Creek get a truck the same day. For true no-water emergencies, we answer the phone 24/7 and get moving right away.
Every job starts with a free estimate and ends with a working system, not an upsell. We're licensed and insured in Washington, and we put our pricing in writing before work starts. We also cover the rest of the valley, from Leavenworth down through Wenatchee and East Wenatchee, so if you've got family or neighbors on wells nearby, we've probably already worked their road.
Usually the same day, and often within a few hours. Cashmere is a short drive up Highway 2 from our Wenatchee base. For after-hours emergencies, call (509) 224-3484 and you'll reach a real person, not a voicemail.
Almost never. The drilled well itself can last a century if the casing is sound. It's the pump, wiring, and pressure tank that wear out. We test the well's recovery and the equipment, then replace only what's actually failed.
Two common causes around Cashmere. First, heavy summer demand from irrigation can pull harder on a tired pump. Second, some wells in the foothills see seasonal water level drops in late summer. We can test your well's output and tell you which one you're dealing with.
Yes. We repair and replace irrigation pumps on orchards and acreage all around Cashmere and the Wenatchee River valley. If your trees need water in July, we treat it like the emergency it is.
Free written estimates. Emergency no-water calls answered around the clock.