TonyF
Silver Member
- Joined
- Jul 7, 2010
- Messages
- 142
- Location
- Huntsville AL
- Tractor
- BX200D w/FEL, B21 TLB, KX91-3SS. F700 Dump Truck
The spot you can see (except that it is dry in the pic) is 7-10 feet I think. The issue I have is not so much the bumps, but the tire rut nearest the pond (and it is only 12-18 inches from steep drop into the pond) is like 6 inches lower that the other tire rut, and in 2wd (which is my default state) the tractor goes sideways slightly in the muck and clay. I would HATE to drop the tractor into the pond...
I also need the tractor road to be passable for my riding mowers.
You can probably get away without the pipe. No sense making it more complicated than it has to be.
But then you mentioned the short difference to the drop off to the pond and what sounds like a slope.
You might want to stack some rocks on down slope side of this hole to act as a retaining wall for the gravel. ...with rocks/rip rap acting as a retaining wall the gravel will not move.
Given the margin for error with the pond I would be looking to at least level out that spot.
Instead of the pipe to drain the water... Check out the following document.
Later,
Dan
That was a close one at the pond as you were inches from going in!
Jim
Jim,
I think is was actually not a close as it looks, but in 2wd it was a bit of what I refer to as a "pucker factor 15" moment... (on a scale of 1-10)
Ice or snow would make this section impassable I feel... Too risky as is...
Ken45101 said:If you don't have enough rocks in your place, you are welcome to all you need from here
Ken
Dan,
The doc was interesting and gave me some ideas. I have another water/road problem I've not brought up yet that maybe those ideas might help...
There is very limited space alongside the pond and the road to place rip-rap, but I like the idea.
I also am VERY interested in ideas for how to level this section while I am doing this. because the idea I am MOST scared of is winter with snow/ice and the tractor sliding sideways... and SPLASH... I'm not even sure how deep the pond is there... I do not want to test it with my DK50... The "slope" makes me worry...
I do have an alternative route I can (and will on occassion) take, but it tears up the visible yard areas. I really need this to be an effective road. maybe even eventually one my pickup with a trailer of hay can use.
Thanks,
David
When it's wet out, just don't use the tractor - farming is a sunny day sort of thing.
--->Paul
In looking at your pictures, it appears you may need to use a combination of approaches if you don't want to go with a lot of rock. One thing I would do first is move the road away from the pond if at all possible.
Rerouting in some areas may also be an option.
With the cost of rock and good culverts, finding a cheap way to fix your roads is going to be hard.
RRR,
I will look at that idea of moving the road over away from the pond. There are only a few feet between the road an the outbuilding, and there are a couple trees there also I would need to grind stumps etc...
I do not want to weaken the foundation of the "barn" though... I suspect I can get a foot, or maybe 18" max.
My biggest concern is without rending an excavator, I'm not sure I will have good enough footing to dig it up with the tractor, because the only ground to work from is the current road.
I will look at this when I get home tonight.
Thanks for the thought!
Be well,
David
Moss,
I think there are some good suggestions on here. I would maybe add rip rap (rail road size rock) first then gravel on top. Like others have said I think you may need several methods on your roads.
You could always just build a corduroy road. It doesn't sound like your bog road is that long.
How big of logs do I need to use, and how long might it last? I'm thinking about using a corduroy road solution for the turn off bog spot and I'm wondering how big the "logs" need to be... Might actually be more work cutting and limbing the logs than digging and using gravel.
David