Drain Root Cutting Wakefield //top\\ May 2026
“Frank, got a blocked drain over on Denby Dale Road. Customer says the toilet’s backing up. Sounds like roots.”
Twenty minutes later, he heard it—the glorious, satisfying gloop of a blockage clearing. Water rushed through the pipe, carrying the last of the debris away. He ran the camera down to inspect. The cut was clean. A circular tunnel now ran through the heart of the root mass, wide enough for waste to pass. But the roots themselves were still there, alive, clinging to the outside of the pipe. They’d be back. They always came back. drain root cutting wakefield
He lifted the manhole cover in the back yard. The smell hit him first—that sour, primordial stench of stagnant water and decay. He shone his torch down. The channel was choked with a writhing mass of pale, fibrous roots, like the veins of some buried monster. They’d broken through a joint in the pipe and were now weaving a thick mat, trapping wet wipes, congealed fat, and the dark silt of years. “Frank, got a blocked drain over on Denby Dale Road
He fed the electric eel into the pipe. The machine hummed, then growled as the blades bit into the root mass. He felt the vibration through the rubber grips—a juddering, tearing sensation as the cutter spun at high speed. Grrrnd-chunk, grrrnd-chunk. It was an ugly sound, the noise of violent surgery. Shredded root fragments, looking like shredded coconut, began to flush back past the manhole. He worked methodically, pushing the cable further, clearing a path inch by inch. The pipe was old, fragile. If he pushed too hard, he could shatter the clay and create a bigger problem. Too gentle, and the roots would regrow in a month. Water rushed through the pipe, carrying the last
Frank nodded. He’d heard that story a hundred times. The unsung heroes of Wakefield, the Harolds with their makeshift rods and their stubborn pride, keeping the roots at bay. Now it was his job.
He finished his coffee, grabbed his drain rods and the electric eel—a vicious-looking coiled spring with tungsten-carbide cutting blades—and headed out.
“All done,” he said. “Flush the loo a couple times. Should be fine for another year, maybe two.”