JeffInCO
Bronze Member
I've been working on a project for a while to drain a low spot in my pasture. I dug a trench almost 400 feet long with my backhoe, ranging from 2 to 4 feet deep, so that the bottom has a good slope. In some places along the way, there is groundwater at the bottom of the trench. The entire bottom of the trench is clay, and when it is wet, it has no structural capabilities whatsoever... when I first dug the trench, I could sink halfway to my knees when walking in it.
I plan to place a pipe at the bottom of the trench.
I started adding rock -- nominally about 3/4". This seems to help in some spots, but probably about 20 tons of rock later there are still still spots that are structurally pretty week. I tried using a "Jumping Jack" to push more rock into those spots, but this really just caused "liquifaction" -- the entire ground undulating without really getting any harder with the rock.
I want to make sure that there is adequate support at the bottom when I backfill, so that the pipe doesn't become deflected.
Any ideas to stabilize the bottom? I found a few research papers which indicated adding cement to wet clay might give it some structure. Anyone tried this?
Thanks,
Jeff
I plan to place a pipe at the bottom of the trench.
I started adding rock -- nominally about 3/4". This seems to help in some spots, but probably about 20 tons of rock later there are still still spots that are structurally pretty week. I tried using a "Jumping Jack" to push more rock into those spots, but this really just caused "liquifaction" -- the entire ground undulating without really getting any harder with the rock.
I want to make sure that there is adequate support at the bottom when I backfill, so that the pipe doesn't become deflected.
Any ideas to stabilize the bottom? I found a few research papers which indicated adding cement to wet clay might give it some structure. Anyone tried this?
Thanks,
Jeff