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Yard drainage question
Posted by PTBob on 9/10/22 at 5:22 pm10
I have a drainage ditch that runs through my yard. Was just a natural drainage ditch but looked pretty awful so had a guy come pretty it up a bit.
Well, over time the water has managed to create a new path of erosion and I’m not sure if I should rearrange and add more rock or if there are better solutions?
The picture doesn’t show the significance of the erosion. The grass and dirt used to edge up to the rock and where the fabric is.
Well, over time the water has managed to create a new path of erosion and I’m not sure if I should rearrange and add more rock or if there are better solutions?
The picture doesn’t show the significance of the erosion. The grass and dirt used to edge up to the rock and where the fabric is.
also, as you can see there is a lot of growth in the rock. this drainage drains into the lake. how would y'all manage those with minimal effort? i'm assuming diesel or roundup wouldn't be the best due to eventually making it into the lake.
quote:
Large rocks on the edge and smaller in the middle
I would agree with this. Push the larger rocks out lateral toward the edges and to fill in the erosion spots. Smaller rocks and even no rocks in the middle for the channel. Logically that would minimize the erosion and maximize the channel flow.
You don’t have to do it all in a day or week. Just over time, try to optimize it and stop the erosion spots from worsening.
I would not add new rocks. I would just move the ones you have. Make the max flow and least resistance go through the middle.
This post was edited on 9/10 at 11:19 pm
Zappas Stache
Los Angeles Dodgers Fan
Utility Muffin Research Kitchen
Member since Apr 2009
38526 posts
Los Angeles Dodgers Fan
Utility Muffin Research Kitchen
Member since Apr 2009
38526 posts
re: Yard drainage questionPosted by Zappas Stache on 9/10/22 at 11:36 pm to PTBob
As a designer, that looks like crap. You should vary the width of the rock bed and use various size rocks rather than all the same size. By widening the rock bed in areas, that will cover the eroded areas. Here is a pic of what I am talking about.
Plantings some low growing plants at the edges will make it nicer too. As for the weeds coming up, roundup isn't great to dump into a lake and please don't use diesel. Use roundup if you have to. It looks like filter fabric is under the rock which is good and use that under any new rock.
Plantings some low growing plants at the edges will make it nicer too. As for the weeds coming up, roundup isn't great to dump into a lake and please don't use diesel. Use roundup if you have to. It looks like filter fabric is under the rock which is good and use that under any new rock.
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re: Yard drainage questionPosted by PTBob on 9/11/22 at 12:01 am to Zappas Stache
Sounds good thanks for the recommendations. Same for poster above you. I’ll slowly move rocks, bust up larger into smaller rocks to get larger on the outside and smaller on the inside and organize them better.
re: Yard drainage questionPosted by LSUfan20005 on 9/11/22 at 8:28 am to PTBob
Is it just me or does that swale curve near the bottom look like a forced path, whereas I’d expect water to want to jump out?
My preference is actually no weed barrier and plant hardy perennials in the swale. This will hold soil better and slow the drainage better. Plenty of people prefer the dry rock bed look though
My preference is actually no weed barrier and plant hardy perennials in the swale. This will hold soil better and slow the drainage better. Plenty of people prefer the dry rock bed look though
re: Yard drainage questionPosted by PTBob on 9/11/22 at 8:57 am to LSUfan20005
thats the path it was taking when we bought the property. culvert goes under the driveway and then goes under the road into the lake. it very well may have been forced by digging before i purchased it though.
I saw someone on here the other day that used a propane torch from Harbor Freight to kill his yard. Looking at YouTube, a number of people use it to kill weeds. Perhaps something like that could be used to get the weeds since it drains into a lake.
I've had to deal with this exact scenario. The issue is maintenance. Every so often (several years) you will have to remove the soil, leaves and debris from the channel. The means moving the rocks. You'll find the debris gets concentrated in certain places- around bends or low spots.
The rocks are there to slow down the flow and reduce erosion. Unfortunately, they also trap leaves and debris which naturally clogs the system.
If you want to control what the water wants to do naturally, you have to maintain it, otherwise it'll do what it do!
The rocks are there to slow down the flow and reduce erosion. Unfortunately, they also trap leaves and debris which naturally clogs the system.
If you want to control what the water wants to do naturally, you have to maintain it, otherwise it'll do what it do!
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