MrJimi
Elite Member, Rest in Peace
I'm wonder if this gravel will sink in the ground like stepping on a golf ball in the mud ?

slowrev said:I would put larger gravel than the crush mix you mentioned. At least a 5-7 size, called 57 around here. Then after that is stable add the crush mix on top if you want.
Not a pro at it , but the way I would do it.
MrJimi said:I'm wonder if this gravel will sink in the ground like stepping on a golf ball in the mud ?
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jeffinsgf said:One golf ball gets squished into the mud. A bucket of golf balls starts bridging the mud and elevating the grade. The most solid section of my drive was a soupy area that we spread 4 x 6 crushed limestone in when it was a total quagmire. Stands up to heavy truck traffic even during heavy saturation periods.
MrJimi said:Thats what I was thinking, It would take a bunch to make it solid again
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ray66v said:The gravel will continue to sink and the mud will continue to come up, every time the ground gets soft, no matter what size you use. Geo Textile Fabric is the only way to keep the clay from coming up. It will create a barrier between the stone and the gravel.
I would remove 4-6", put down the fabric. Put down two, 2-3" layers of #304, or #411, moisten and compact between layers. Then cap it, (optional), with a thin layer of #57. This will provide you with a good looking drive that will not get muddy. The money you spend on the fabric will come back in gravel savings.
I have 300'+ of this and most of the year you can jack up a car on it.