Water Station Rentals Bakersfield
Our Core Service Offering, We Are The Leading Provider of Cold Drinking Water Station Rentals Across Bakersfield and Kern County
Cal/OSHA-compliant cold drinking water stations dispatched across Bakersfield and Kern County since 2014. Towable Signature Series® units. Same-week availability for oil patch, ag, construction, and events.

When the Valley Hits 109 and the Job Can't Stop, We Roll
On-Site Hydration Services keeps Bakersfield workers, wedding guests, race fans, and festival crowds cold-water hydrated when the Central Valley does what it does best, bake everything from the I-5 grapevine to the Tehachapi pass. Our Signature Series® Cold Drinking Water Station rolls in on a trailer, parks where you need it, and pours filtered, refrigerated water from four push-back taps. No bottles. No coolers melting by lunch. No frantic Costco runs at 6 a.m. because the case-pack ran dry by Tuesday afternoon.
Kern County operators rely on us because we understand the math of working in 108-degree heat. A pallet of bottled water looks like a solution until you watch a 30-person crew at an Elk Hills drilling pad burn through it before the shift's halfway done. Then you're paying a runner to make two trips to the Taft Family Dollar instead of pulling pipe. Our station holds 300 gallons onboard, chills it to drinking temperature in-line, and refills from any standard hose bib or water buffalo. One trailer, one drop-off, one pickup. The rest of the rental window, your crew just drinks.
24/7 Rapid Dispatch Available
Serving all of Kern County
11 incorporated cities and 20+ City of Bakersfield neighborhoods.
Phone: (866) 748-5932
Email: info@onsitehydrationservices.com
Hours: Mon-Fri 7am to 6pm PT
Emergency dispatch: 24/7 for declared incidents, wildfire response, and same-day vendor failures.
Cal/OSHA-compliant cold drinking water stations dispatched across Bakersfield and Kern County since 2014. Towable Signature Series® units. Same-week availability for oil patch, ag, construction, and events.
One Product, Built for Central Valley Reality
The Signature Series® Cold Drinking Water Station is what we do. Single product, engineered for exactly this kind of climate. Four-tap push-back filling stations let four people refill bottles at once without anyone touching a spout. Multi-stage filtration removes chlorine, sediment, and the mineral funk that Bakersfield’s hard water carries. Built-in chillers keep output at 38-42°F even when ambient air is touching 110°F. Towable trailer chassis means it shows up behind a one-ton pickup and parks anywhere your crew or guests can reach. When a job needs more capacity than one unit handles, we deploy multiple Signature Series® stations, same equipment, scaled. Scenario one. Elk Hills, mid-July. Ambient is 108°F by 10 a.m. The contractor has 42 hands on a 14-day shutdown rebuilding compressor stations. Bottled water plan: roughly 14 cases per day, runner truck twice daily, $2,800 across the project before tip and fuel. Our plan: one Signature Series® unit parked beside the lay-down yard, hose-fed off the field’s frost-free, refilled by the crew themselves as they go. Cold water available continuously without anyone leaving the worksite. Scenario two. Kern County Fair vendor row, Friday before opening. Twelve food trucks, eighteen craft booths, and the carnival ride crew all need potable water for refilling cambros, washing hands, and keeping vendors themselves from collapsing in the September heat that still pushes 100°F a week into fall. Our station drops in behind the midway, four taps running simultaneously, no waiting in line at the lone hose bib by the maintenance shed. Scenario three. Late-October wedding at Stockdale Country Club, 220 guests on the lawn. Outdoor ceremony at 4 p.m. The forecast says 96°F. The wedding planner has seen what happens when grandparents wilt during a 45-minute ceremony plus cocktail hour, and she’s not letting it happen on her watch. Our trailer parks discreetly behind the catering tent, draped in the linen rental the venue already had, and pours cold water all afternoon.
Signature Series® Specifications
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| No. of Stations | (4) Bottle Filling Stations |
| Box Size | 97" × 51" |
| Weight | 2,200 lbs |
| Length w/ caster wheels | 9'1" |
| Width w/ Jacks | 66" |
| Height (with A/C unit) | 7'3" |
| Fresh Water Tank | 300 Gallons |
| Gray Water Tank | 29 Gallons (Optional) |
| Power Requirements | 1-3 dedicated 20A/120V circuits OR 1 dedicated 50A/240V circuit |
| No. of AC Units | 1 |
Bakersfield by the Numbers, and What Those Numbers Mean for Hydration
Kern County is bigger than New Jersey. Read that twice. Eight thousand square miles of oil patch, almond orchards, dairy operations, wind farms, military test ranges, and the freeway corridor that moves a meaningful slice of America’s freight from the Port of LA to the rest of the country. Bakersfield itself is California’s ninth largest city, and the county pulls 917,000 residents, most of them working outside or in unconditioned ag and industrial spaces during the months when the heat is most dangerous.
Geography and the Microclimate Spread
Kern County sprawls from the southern Sierra Nevada down through the Tehachapi range, across the Valley floor, west into the Carrizo Plain and the Cuyama. A single rental request might land at a job site sitting at 400 feet of elevation in 109°F air, or at 4,000 feet up in Tehachapi where summer afternoons cap at 88°F and the wind comes in hard. Same trailer, same chilled output, we deliver to both, and the unit performs identically because the refrigeration loop runs on shore power or a small generator regardless of altitude.
The Oil Capital of California
Roughly 70% of every barrel California produces comes out of Kern County ground. Chevron, Aera Energy, California Resources Corporation, and a long tail of mid-cap operators run the Kern River Field, Elk Hills, Buena Vista, Midway-Sunset, and a dozen smaller pools. The workforce is mostly outdoor, often remote, and frequently doing physically demanding rebuild work during the summer months when production is steady but maintenance windows open up. Bottled water at these sites is a known logistics tax. We exist partly because that tax got too big to ignore.
Agriculture and the Heat Illness Reality Nobody Wants to Talk About
Kern is California's third largest ag county by output. Almonds, table grapes, raisin grapes, pistachios, citrus, carrots, potatoes, and a dairy industry that touches every corner of the county floor. The labor force is roughly 50,000 farmworkers, most of whom work in direct sun during the harvest months. Cal/OSHA's heat illness regulations were written in part because Central Valley farmworker deaths have been a documented problem for two decades. Hydration access isn't a nice-to-have here. It's the difference between a crew finishing the day and an ambulance call.
Highway 99 Widening and the High-Speed Rail Build
Caltrans has been widening Highway 99 through Bakersfield in phases for years now, and the California High-Speed Rail alignment cuts through Wasco and Shafter on its way south. Both projects mean active construction zones with crews working in full sun, often miles from the nearest convenience store. Add the warehouse buildout along the 99 corridor, Amazon, Cal-Mart, the Tejon Ranch logistics hub, and the trades workforce in Kern County is busier than it's been since the oil boom of the early 2000s.
Edwards Air Force Base and the Military Footprint
Edwards AFB sits in northeastern Kern, and Naval Air Weapons Station China Lake straddles the Kern-Inyo line. Both run flight test, ordnance development, and the kind of remote-pad construction work where civilian contractors don't have ready access to base facilities. We've supported defense contractor work in the Mojave and Antelope Valley margins, and the proximity to our Bakersfield delivery routes makes these jobs straightforward to service.
Weddings, Country Music Heritage, and the Hospitality Side
Buck Owens' Crystal Palace, the Kern County Fairgrounds concerts, the Tehachapi mountain wedding venues, Stockdale and Bakersfield Country Clubs. The hospitality calendar in Kern County is full. Country music has deep roots here. The Bakersfield Sound built a venue infrastructure that still draws major touring acts. Outdoor events at the Crystal Palace, the Stramler Park amphitheater, and the Fairgrounds all run hot half the year. We do a lot of work in this lane.
Why Bakersfield Operators Hire Us Instead of Stacking Pallets
Fresno HQ Is 1.5 Hours North on the 99
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Built for Central Valley Heat, Not Coastal Mild
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Cal/OSHA Heat Illness Language Built into Every Quote
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One Vendor Across Multiple Kern County Sites
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Towable Trailer, Not a Box Truck
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Refill Logistics Aren't Your Problem
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Real People Answer the Phone in Fresno
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We Show Up Clean, and We Know Kern County Sites
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What Bakersfield Crews and Event Planners Actually Use Us For
Fourteen Bakersfield scenarios. One Signature Series trailer. The job changes, the equipment doesn’t.
Bakersfield Oil Field Turnarounds and Shutdowns
Kern River, Elk Hills, Midway-Sunset, and Buena Vista all run scheduled turnarounds and shutdowns where crews of 40-100 trades hit the site for 7-21 days of compressor rebuilds, pipeline integrity work, and vessel inspections. Bottled water plans crumble fast at that headcount in 108°F heat. We park the trailer beside the lay-down yard and the crew just drinks.
→ See Bakersfield oil patch water station rentalsBakersfield Refinery Maintenance Windows
Refinery turnaround crews working the Kern County refining footprint need continuous Cal/OSHA-compliant cold water access during multi-week maintenance windows. We stage units inside the fence line wherever the GC's contractor footprint sits.
→ See Bakersfield refinery water station rentalsBakersfield Drilling Pad Construction Crews
Multi-week deployments on new drilling pad construction across the Cuyama corridor, western Kern, and the Lost Hills perimeter. Remote sites, often no shore power. We deliver with the unit configured for whatever the site has, generator included if needed.
→ See Bakersfield drilling pad water station rentalsBakersfield Pipeline Integrity Crews
Pipeline integrity teams working remote pump stations along the Cuyama corridor and the broader Kern County pipeline network. The trailer travels with the crew between pump stations as the integrity sweep progresses.
→ See Bakersfield pipeline water station rentalsBakersfield Almond and Pistachio Harvest Staging
Almond and pistachio harvest staging where the ag labor force needs continuous cold water access through October. We deliver to the staging yard at the edge of the orchard so workers don't lose 20 minutes walking back to a pallet of bottles.
→ See Bakersfield ag harvest water station rentalsBakersfield Highway 99 Widening Crews
Caltrans Highway 99 widening contractor crews working the active construction zones from south Bakersfield to Delano. Cal/OSHA compliance paperwork built into every rental quote.
→ See Bakersfield Highway 99 water station rentalsBakersfield Warehouse Buildout Construction
Cal-Mart and Amazon distribution center buildouts along the 99 corridor, plus the broader logistics warehouse boom from south Bakersfield to Shafter. Monthly rental terms standard for multi-month GC contracts.
→ See Bakersfield warehouse construction water station rentalsBakersfield High-Speed Rail Construction
California High-Speed Rail station and viaduct work crews in Wasco and Shafter. Active construction zones with crews working in full sun, often miles from the nearest convenience store.
→ See Bakersfield HSR water station rentalsBakersfield Edwards AFB Contractor Projects
Edwards Air Force Base civilian contractor projects on the perimeter test ranges. Civilian contractors don't have ready access to base facilities, so we deliver to the contractor staging yard at the gate.
→ See Bakersfield Edwards AFB water station rentalsBakersfield Tehachapi Wind Farm Construction
Tehachapi wind farm construction and turbine maintenance teams working at altitude. The unit performs identically at 4,000 feet because the refrigeration loop runs on shore power or a small generator regardless of altitude.
→ See Bakersfield Tehachapi wind farm water station rentalsBakersfield Outdoor Weddings
Stockdale Country Club, Bakersfield Country Club, Murray Family Farms, Tehachapi mountain venues, and The Park at River Walk. The trailer parks discreetly behind the catering tent, draped in the venue's linen rental, and pours cold water all afternoon.
→ See Bakersfield wedding water station rentalsBakersfield Kern County Fair and Crystal Palace
Kern County Fair vendor row, midway operations, and concert support. Crystal Palace outdoor events and Buck Owens Birthday Bash crowds. Twelve-day Fair runs and one-night concert pops both work for us.
→ See Bakersfield Kern County Fair water station rentalsBakersfield Marathons and Endurance Events
Bakersfield Marathon water stations along the December race route. Charity 5Ks and walks along the Kern River Parkway. Aid stations need hydration that arrives on time and doesn't run out at mile 9.
→ See Bakersfield marathon water station rentalsBakersfield Youth Sports, Schools, and Civic Events
Youth sports tournaments at Stramler Park and the CSUB athletic complex, regional cheer and dance competitions at Mechanics Bank Arena's outdoor staging areas, Friday night football crowds at the bigger valley high school venues, and the steady stream of corporate ribbon-cuttings along the 99 corridor.
→ See Bakersfield civic and school water station rentalsRental Terms, Pick What Fits the Job
On-Site Hydration Services rents a single piece of equipment, the Signature Series Cold Drinking Water Station, on whatever rental shape fits the Bakersfield or Kern County job in front of you.
The Signature Series® is the single piece of equipment. The flexibility is in how long and how often you want it on site. Nine rental shapes cover everything from a one-day Buck Owens Birthday Bash to an open-ended oil patch contract at Elk Hills.
- Single-day event rental. Perfect for weddings, festivals, charity 5Ks, and one-day vendor activations. Drop in the morning, pickup that night or next morning.
- Weekend rental. Friday delivery, Monday pickup. The Kern County Fair weekend, Saturday tournaments, Buck Owens Birthday Bash crowds.
- Multi-day event rental. Three to seven days covers most concert series, county fair runs, regional sports tournaments at CSUB or the speedway.
- Weekly rental. Standard for short construction crews, mid-size ag harvest support, oil patch maintenance windows under 10 days.
- Multi-week rental. Two to eight weeks for medium-duration construction projects, refinery turnarounds, longer pipeline integrity campaigns.
- Monthly rental. Standard rate structure for sites planning at least 30 days of continuous coverage. Most common for Highway 99 contractor work and warehouse buildouts.
- Quarterly rental. Three-month commitments at reduced monthly rates. Frequent setup for oil patch operators with rolling crew assignments across multiple Kern County pads.
- Seasonal rental. May through October blanket coverage for ag operations that know they’ll need hydration support across the whole harvest stretch.
- Open-ended ongoing. Month-to-month with no end date specified. Common for large industrial sites that just want the unit on the yard until further notice.
Cal/OSHA Section 3395 Is Not a Suggestion. It's the Reason We're Here.
The Central Valley’s farmworker heat illness death toll over the past two decades is a matter of public record. Cal/OSHA tightened Section 3395, the heat illness prevention standard, specifically because Kern, Tulare, and Fresno county workers were dying in fields and on construction sites in numbers that demanded a regulatory response. The rule requires employers to provide one quart of fresh, pure, suitably cool drinking water per employee per hour, located as close as practicable to the work area, with no requirement that workers pay for it. It requires shade access at 80°F ambient, a written heat illness prevention plan, training, emergency response protocols, and acclimatization procedures for new workers.
Bottled water complies on paper. In practice, it fails the proximity test.
A pallet of cases stacked next to the foreman’s truck a quarter mile from the active picking row is technically present. Whether anyone walks back to it during a hot shift is a different question. Heat illness happens because workers don’t take the breaks they need, don’t drink the water they need, and don’t recognize early symptoms in themselves. Removing friction from the drinking-water step is the single most effective intervention an employer can make. The trailer parks where the work is. Four taps mean no waiting line. Refrigeration means the water is actually cool. Compliance becomes the path of least resistance.
Oil patch enforcement is real, and the audit cost is real.
Cal/OSHA’s enforcement priority in recent years has explicitly named oil and gas extraction as a high-focus sector for inspection. Crews doing heavy mechanical work in 108°F weather are at acute heat illness risk, especially during the first week of a shift when acclimatization hasn’t completed. Having documented hydration capacity that survives an audit is no longer optional. It’s standard operating practice for any operator who wants to keep working.
Construction GC math: a Cal/OSHA citation can clear $25,000 per occurrence.
For construction GCs on the Highway 99 widening, the high-speed rail alignment, and the warehouse buildouts along the freeway, the math is similar. The Cal/OSHA citation cost for a heat illness violation can clear $25,000 per occurrence. The cost of a Signature Series® rental for the same window is a small fraction of that, and it includes the actual safety benefit, not just the paperwork.
Remote-site response time is the part that often goes unsaid.
Heat illness response time on a remote Kern County job site is not the same as in downtown LA. An ambulance call from a drilling pad twenty miles outside Lost Hills isn’t going to put paramedics on scene in eight minutes. The prevention end of the equation has to do more work because the response end has less margin. Continuous cold-water access closes that gap in a way that no amount of safety briefing can substitute for.
For event producers, the calculation shifts but the principle holds. A Kern County Fair vendor row in September runs at 100°F. A wedding at a Tehachapi mountain venue can still hit 92°F at 4 p.m. in August. Guest hydration isn’t a Cal/OSHA matter, but it’s a hospitality matter and a liability matter both. Heat-stricken guests don’t write nice reviews.
Four Microclimates, One Trailer That Handles All of Them
Kern County contains at least four distinct climate zones, and a station that performs in one needs to perform in all four. Here’s what we deliver into.
Zone 1: Urban Valley Floor (Bakersfield Proper, Oildale, Rosedale).
Elevation 400-500 feet. Summer highs routinely 100-110°F. Heat dome events push 115°F+ multiple days per summer. Winter brings the tule fog and the inversion-layer smog. The unit runs on standard 110V shore power or a small genset, chiller capacity sized to maintain output at peak ambient. No issues.
Zone 2: Oil Patch West (Taft, Maricopa, Lost Hills, McKittrick).
Same temperature profile as the Valley floor, plus the wind that comes off the Carrizo Plain in summer afternoons. Remote sites, often no shore power, generator-fed setups common. We deliver with the unit configured for whatever the site has. Dust on the chiller intake is the main maintenance variable, and the filter design accounts for it.
Zone 3: Tehachapi Mountains (Tehachapi, Stallion Springs, Bear Valley Springs).
Elevation 4,000+ feet. Summer highs 80-90°F (which feels relatively mild after a Bakersfield drive up the pass). Winter brings real snow and overnight lows in the teens. The unit runs winterized when needed, with the chiller throttled appropriately. Wind farm construction, mountain weddings, and Tehachapi Mountain Festival are the main use cases up here.
Zone 4: Kern River Valley (Lake Isabella, Kernville, Wofford Heights).
Elevation 2,500-3,000 feet at the lake, climbing as you head east toward Sequoia. Mountain recreation country. Mild summers in the 80s-90s, mountain rafting season May through September, Kern River Festival draws regional crowds. We deliver up here for whitewater outfitter staging, festival support, and the occasional fire camp when CAL FIRE Kern Unit is working the eastern slopes.
Four microclimates inside one county. We route every rental against the right one.
Neighborhoods and Cities Across Kern County
Twelve Kern County locations where we run regular routes. If your address isn’t on this list, we still deliver. Ask us.
Downtown Bakersfield
Pop: ~30,000
Mechanics Bank Arena events, Padre Hotel weddings, Crystal Palace concert support, urban construction infill projects, and county government complex contractor work.
Stockdale
Pop: ~50,000
West side, country club country. Stockdale Country Club weddings and tournaments, Riverlakes-adjacent residential events, Cal State Bakersfield campus support.
Northwest Bakersfield
Pop: ~75,000
Riverlakes, Polo Grounds, Brimhall corridor. Suburban events, sports tournaments, and the steady stream of corporate campus and warehouse construction along the 99/Olive Drive node.
Southwest Bakersfield
Pop: ~60,000
Stockdale extension, Old River corridor, newer residential and commercial buildout. Construction-heavy zone with the kind of long-duration GC projects that benefit from monthly rental terms.
East Bakersfield & Oildale
Pop: ~45,000
Working-class neighborhoods north of the Kern River. Oilfield service company yards, refinery support businesses, blue-collar event spaces. Significant oil patch logistical footprint headquartered here.
South Bakersfield
Pop: ~40,000
Industrial heavy. Warehousing, distribution, the southern stretch of the Highway 99 corridor. Active construction zones plus established industrial sites running maintenance windows.
Taft
Pop: ~9,000
Pure oil town, southwest Kern. Surrounding oil patch workforce balloons it during shift changes. Elk Hills field operators headquartered here. Multi-week unit deployments common.
Tehachapi
Pop: ~35,000
Mountain town. Wind farm capital of California. Mountain Valley Ranch weddings, Tehachapi Mountain Festival, and the wind energy industry’s ongoing construction and maintenance presence.
Wasco
Pop: ~26,000
Northwest of Bakersfield, ag country plus the high-speed rail alignment. Rose capital of the U.S., almond and grape acreage, and active HSR construction crews.
Delano
Pop: ~52,000
Northern Kern, on the Tulare County line. Grape country, ag labor heavy, Cesar Chavez historical significance. Harvest-season hydration support is a recurring annual need.
Shafter
Pop: ~21,000
Logistics hub on the 99, just north of Bakersfield. Cal-Mart Distribution, the high-speed rail station alignment, and a growing cluster of distribution warehouses. Multi-month construction rentals common.
Arvin & Lamont
Pop: ~35,000
Southeast Kern, deep ag country. Grape, citrus, and carrot growers. Some of the highest farmworker densities in the county. Cal/OSHA compliance is the headline driver for rental requests here.
Sustainability and the Bottle-Pallet Math
Bakersfield adopted a Climate Action Plan that targets municipal greenhouse gas reductions, and the city’s water-conscious framing extends into how local industrial and ag operators are evaluating their supply chains. A construction crew on a six-month project that switches from bottled water to a Signature Series® rental eliminates roughly 35,000 to 50,000 single-use plastic bottles from the waste stream over the rental window. For a year-long oil patch contract running multiple units, that number climbs into the hundreds of thousands.
The Central Valley’s water reuse mandates have tightened in response to the drought cycles of the past 15 years, and Kern County operators are increasingly being asked to document their water sourcing and waste reduction. Our unit refills from any standard hose bib, which means the water comes from the same potable municipal supply the rest of the site uses. There’s no separate fleet of plastic-wrapped pallets trucked in from a Modesto or Stockton bottling plant. The carbon footprint of the rental window is the diesel to deliver and retrieve the trailer, plus the small power draw of the chiller. That’s it.
For oil and gas operators specifically, environmental accountability has become a meaningful line item in operator scorecards. The major producers operating in Kern, Chevron, Aera, CRC, all publish sustainability reports that touch on jobsite waste reduction. Eliminating bottle waste from active worksites is a measurable, documentable contribution to those targets. Several of our oil patch clients explicitly cite this when renewing contracts.
The simpler version: a pallet of bottled water is roughly 2,500 pounds of stuff that has to be trucked in, stored, distributed across the site, drunk, and then collected as recycling or trash. A Signature Series® unit weighs about the same as one pallet but does the work of dozens of them across a multi-week deployment. The math, before you even get to the worker safety benefits, is hard to argue with.
Questions Bakersfield Operators Ask Most Often
The Fair runs mid-September and bookings start coming in by July. Vendor row operators and Fair management both reserve units months out. For the 2026 season, we’d recommend confirming by late July if you want guaranteed availability for the full 12-day run.
Usually yes. The trailer handles unimproved access roads as long as a half-ton or larger pickup can reach the location. We’ve delivered into Elk Hills, Cuyama, and the western Lost Hills pads without issue. If access is genuinely tough, we’ll do a site visit before committing.
Output temperature stays in the 38-42°F range. The chiller is sized for peak Central Valley summer, and the insulation on the tank handles the ambient load. We’ve run units through multiple heat dome events without performance degradation.
Yes. We can include a small genset with the rental, sized to run the chiller continuously. Most oil patch sites already have power available, but for remote ag staging or pop-up event sites, we bring our own.
Your rental paperwork documents the equipment specs (capacity, location, refill source) and we can provide additional documentation for your written heat illness prevention plan. The unit itself is visible, accessible, and provides clearly potable water, which is what an inspector wants to see.
Standard practice. The Cal-Mart distribution buildout, large oil patch turnarounds, and the bigger ag operations frequently run 2-4 units across a single site. Same equipment, same rental terms scaled to the unit count.
We routinely deliver to Tehachapi, Lake Isabella, Taft, Maricopa, Delano, Wasco, and Lost Hills. Edwards AFB and the Mojave-adjacent jobs are also within standard service range. For locations further into Inyo or Kings counties, we can usually still deliver, just give us a little more notice on the routing.
Filtration is multi-stage (sediment, carbon, fine filter) and removes chlorine and the mineral taste Bakersfield’s municipal supply carries. For Tehachapi sites and mountain venues seeing overnight lows in the teens, we winterize the unit with insulated jacketing and heat tape. For oil patch dust, the chiller intake has a serviceable filter, and our drivers check it during longer deployments. We’ve been running equipment in Kern County conditions since 2014.
Ready to Get the Trailer Rolling South on the 99?
Bakersfield and Kern County are core service territory for us. Our dispatcher in Fresno can usually confirm a same-week delivery for anything from a Friday wedding at Stockdale Country Club to a 90-day oil patch deployment at Elk Hills. Tell us where the job is, what the rental window looks like, and roughly how many people the unit needs to serve. We'll come back with a quote that includes the Cal/OSHA capacity math, the delivery schedule, and any generator or accessory recommendations based on what your site has and doesn't have. If it's a multi-site contract across Taft, downtown, and Wasco, we can wrap it into one paperwork package. If it's a single weekend rental for a Buck Owens Birthday Bash afterparty in Oildale, that's a five-minute phone call. Either way, the trailer will be where you need it, when you need it, pouring cold filtered water from the first hour of the rental window to the last. Call (866) 748-5932 today, or use the form on this page. We answer in Fresno, we dispatch from Fresno, and we run the 99 to Bakersfield more often than most people run errands across town.
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