trlong
Platinum Member
I'm looking for advise as to what materials to use, what depth, and how best to properly drain an area, once it is filled/re-landscaped.
Posted is (hopefully) a picture of the swale in the late Spring, after I had cleared and burned most of the scrub (weeds, various sapplings, and a bunch of aspen growing throughout the area) that had grown up while I was busy with other things and vegetation had begun to return. This area is a natural drainage, on my property, for my neighbor's property, draining down into a ditch, then through a culvert on my propery. The native soils are glacial silt with significant water within 6" of the surface a good portion of the year, sometimes on the surface if raining hard.
In the center of picture (although not obvious as pictures flatten everything) the land drops down about 4' from where I was standing. The rise on the right side is, maybe, 2 1/2 to 3' and the rise on the left side is at least 5' from the lowest, closest, area of the swale.
My basic intent is to fill the area such that I can seed and mow it while we decide what plantings to do. Obviously, there will need to be some form of drainage (more narrow swale, ditch with culvert to cross, ....???), so that the natural drainage can occur and still allow me to mow and landscape without being 2' in mud in the center.
The area is approximately 130' long (looking down that picture) by maybe 50' wide, narrowing to 10' wide.
Thoughts on materials and # of yards of sand, stone, fill, topsoil, would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Tom
PS [The birds nest spruce I rescued from the town park, and the native red-stick dogwood can not be disturbed...boss's orders /forums/images/graemlins/smirk.gif]
Posted is (hopefully) a picture of the swale in the late Spring, after I had cleared and burned most of the scrub (weeds, various sapplings, and a bunch of aspen growing throughout the area) that had grown up while I was busy with other things and vegetation had begun to return. This area is a natural drainage, on my property, for my neighbor's property, draining down into a ditch, then through a culvert on my propery. The native soils are glacial silt with significant water within 6" of the surface a good portion of the year, sometimes on the surface if raining hard.
In the center of picture (although not obvious as pictures flatten everything) the land drops down about 4' from where I was standing. The rise on the right side is, maybe, 2 1/2 to 3' and the rise on the left side is at least 5' from the lowest, closest, area of the swale.
My basic intent is to fill the area such that I can seed and mow it while we decide what plantings to do. Obviously, there will need to be some form of drainage (more narrow swale, ditch with culvert to cross, ....???), so that the natural drainage can occur and still allow me to mow and landscape without being 2' in mud in the center.
The area is approximately 130' long (looking down that picture) by maybe 50' wide, narrowing to 10' wide.
Thoughts on materials and # of yards of sand, stone, fill, topsoil, would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Tom
PS [The birds nest spruce I rescued from the town park, and the native red-stick dogwood can not be disturbed...boss's orders /forums/images/graemlins/smirk.gif]