beppington
Elite Member
Below is a pic of the old ~600' "trail" driveway on the property I plan to build a house on.
Much of the lot is just below the flood plain, & this trail is just a whisper above it (~1 ft), so there are 2 spots that become muddy during even a light rain. My limited experience so far is that the 2 mud areas aren't extreme, meaning I don't think a car would drop a foot down into it, but then I don't know that for sure either. (sorry no pics of the muddy areas, but right now they're dry as a bone anyway)
When it's dry, it's perfectly fine to drive on as-is. But it'll need to be able to reliably allow concrete trucks (& others) to get in & out, even when wet.
My question: Should I dig out the existing material ... either the muddy/ clay part, or the entire length of the trail ... in order to fill it back in with driveway material, or should I just spread the new driveway material right on top of the existing trail, so that it's raised as much as possible above the flood plain?
BTW, I was planning on using a driveway material the distributor calls "scrap rock": It's a mixture of the leftover scrap amounts of all their different normal materials that they combine & sell. It's got big stuff, medium stuff & fines, & has limerock, granite, gravel, etc. My friend used it on his driveway, & man it locks together almost as well as pavement. And he didn't even roll/ compact it; just box bladed it smooth & started driving on it.
I'll love to hear any other suggestions, too ... Thanks!
Much of the lot is just below the flood plain, & this trail is just a whisper above it (~1 ft), so there are 2 spots that become muddy during even a light rain. My limited experience so far is that the 2 mud areas aren't extreme, meaning I don't think a car would drop a foot down into it, but then I don't know that for sure either. (sorry no pics of the muddy areas, but right now they're dry as a bone anyway)
When it's dry, it's perfectly fine to drive on as-is. But it'll need to be able to reliably allow concrete trucks (& others) to get in & out, even when wet.
My question: Should I dig out the existing material ... either the muddy/ clay part, or the entire length of the trail ... in order to fill it back in with driveway material, or should I just spread the new driveway material right on top of the existing trail, so that it's raised as much as possible above the flood plain?
BTW, I was planning on using a driveway material the distributor calls "scrap rock": It's a mixture of the leftover scrap amounts of all their different normal materials that they combine & sell. It's got big stuff, medium stuff & fines, & has limerock, granite, gravel, etc. My friend used it on his driveway, & man it locks together almost as well as pavement. And he didn't even roll/ compact it; just box bladed it smooth & started driving on it.
I'll love to hear any other suggestions, too ... Thanks!
