Water restoration for cattle and feedlots

A feedlot's runoff holding pond takes a solids-heavy load off the pens, and it shows: a hardening crust, a sludge blanket that climbs, and pumping that gets harder every season. When it sours, the odor and the readings become the regulator's business along with yours.

The problems we see on your water

What Alchemal installs and takes responsibility for

A feedlot runoff pond takes a solids-heavy load off the pens, and the load tells on it. When the pond’s biology runs out of oxygen the breakdown goes anaerobic, meaning without oxygen, and that turn is behind the hardening crust, the sludge blanket that climbs and eats the pond’s capacity, and the odor and readings that draw a regulator’s attention.

Nanobubble oxygenation keeps the upper column aerobic, so more of the incoming load breaks down before it settles: slower sludge accumulation, a gassy crust that loosens over time, and a biological load that comes down against the baseline. It runs continuously, and nothing about the operation stops. Oxygen changes the rate, not the history, so a pond already carrying years of solids still needs a reset first, and the assessment says so before anything is sized.

We baseline the pond before sizing anything, and Stewardship carries the record: sludge-depth surveys, odor-complaint counts, and the readings themselves. The lagoon-duty N4 is built for high organic loads with no fine passages to clog and carries a published target price band, and what we measure and how is published. The published mechanism figure and its scope sit on the agriculture overview, attributed to nanobubble oxygenation rather than to any Alchemal unit.

Proof from feedlot operators

The first installations for this audience are being instrumented now, and their case files publish when the record is worth reading. The methodology is already public: what we record, how we calibrate, and how we report what didn't move.

From your first note to the assessment

  1. You describe the water. A specialist reads it, replies with a plain answer, and says whether an assessment makes sense.
  2. Your water goes on the schedule. The first assessments and installations are being scheduled now; requests are answered in the order they arrive.
  3. The assessment puts a baseline on paper: dissolved oxygen top to bottom, clarity, the condition of the sediment, and a plan with a prediction attached. If oxygenation isn't the right fix, the report says so.

Questions feedlot operators ask

Will installing this interrupt the operation?

No. The system installs at the holding pond as it stands and runs continuously. The pens, the runoff collection, and the pumping schedule all keep going, and nothing is added to the water except oxygen.

Our pond is heavy with solids and crust. Will oxygen alone fix it?

Not on its own. Oxygenation keeps the column aerobic so the fresh load breaks down faster and new sludge and gas build more slowly, but a pond already carrying years of solids or a thick crust still needs a pump-out or mechanical breaking to reset. The assessment says which case yours is.

How do you size a system for a runoff pond?

The assessment reads the solids load the pens send and sizes to hold the upper column aerobic at that load. A heavily loaded pond needs a load-matched size; an under-sized system fails, so we will not quote one to win on price.

Start with a conversation.

Describe the water and a specialist replies with a plain answer, before any commitment. Your water, your numbers.