Rural Properties and Geothermal: A Natural Match
With a population around 700, Morse doesn’t have HVAC contractors competing for your business. Most heating and cooling companies are based in Crowley, Rayne, or Lafayette, and many of them stick to standard equipment. Geothermal requires specialized knowledge that general HVAC installers may not have.
But here’s the thing: rural Acadia Parish properties are often the best candidates for geothermal. You have the land. The prairie soil is soft and moisture-rich. And the nearest natural gas line might be a costly connection away, making electric heat pump technology an already appealing alternative to propane.
How Geothermal Beats Propane
If your Morse home heats with propane, you already know the pain of fluctuating fuel prices and the hassle of tank deliveries. Propane furnaces also top out around 95 percent efficiency, meaning five cents of every dollar you spend on fuel goes up the flue.
A geothermal system runs entirely on electricity, but uses it with extraordinary efficiency. Moving heat from the ground into your home at 300 to 500 percent efficiency means you get three to five times more heating energy than the electricity you consume. Even with Louisiana electric rates, that dramatically undercuts the cost of propane heating.
In summer, the same system provides air conditioning at similar efficiency levels. One system, two seasons, one fuel source, and the lowest operating costs available in residential HVAC.
What Gets Buried in Your Yard
A horizontal closed-loop system is the standard choice for properties with open ground, and most Morse lots have plenty. Trenches run four to six feet deep across a section of your yard. The installer places high-density polyethylene piping in the trenches, connects the loops to manifold headers, and backfills everything. The piping carries a circulating fluid that exchanges heat with the soil.
The soil conditions in Acadia Parish work well for this. The ground stays moist, which improves heat transfer. The soft composition means trenching equipment moves through it efficiently. And because you’re not dealing with rock or hardpan, the labor portion of the installation stays reasonable.
For the rare Morse property without adequate horizontal space, vertical bore holes are an option, though the drilling adds cost.
System Lifespan and Maintenance
The underground loop piping lasts 50 years or more. It has no moving parts, no electrical connections, and no exposure to weather. The indoor heat pump unit typically runs 20 to 25 years before replacement.
Compare that to a conventional outdoor AC unit lasting 12 to 15 years in this climate, and a propane furnace lasting 15 to 20 years. Over a 50-year span, you’d replace conventional equipment three or more times while the geothermal loop just keeps working.
Annual maintenance is minimal: filter changes, fluid pressure checks, and a professional system inspection. No combustion components to test. No outdoor unit to clean or protect from storms.
Financial Incentives
Federal tax credits for residential geothermal apply to the total system cost, including the loop field and indoor equipment. There’s no dollar cap on the credit, which helps offset geothermal’s higher installation price compared to conventional systems.
Monthly savings of 40 to 60 percent on heating and cooling start immediately. For a rural home currently heating with propane and cooling with a window unit or aging central AC, the improvement in both comfort and cost can be dramatic.
Getting Expert Help in a Small Town
F & R Air Conditioning is based in Abbeville and has served Acadiana since 1956. We work throughout Acadia Parish and bring geothermal design expertise to properties where the conditions are right. Call (337) 893-5646 and we’ll come out to evaluate your Morse property.