mechanicalchad
Mechanical
- Jul 15, 2004
- 36
I have a large clay drainage near an industrial gravel pad that runs several hundred feet that I was considering installing a large French drain with trees (I'll describe below). It can be deep at certain points to maintain grade and has steep side slope which has caused concern about general safety and the ditch sluffing in. The best of both worlds would be to have it filled in and greenery added, at a cost effective price, and still have a good drain. This led me to an idea.
I have lots of top soil from stripping the pad, but screened rock is expensive. The clay ditch is about 6 feet deep with steep side slopes. The source of water is from both a 16" culvert upstream and from the runoff off the pad. The ditch runs for a couple hundred feet then hits an approach with another culvert, and so on.
It is an important drainage; however, I was thinking of extending 16" perforated pipe from the upstream culvert to the downstream culvert in the bottom of the ditch, then covering the perforated pipe with screened rock to a height of just a few inches above the top of the perforated pipe saving on screened rock. Then I was going to lay a geotextile down to separate the screened rock from the layer above, which I was thinking would be about 4" of sand for filtering. Finally on top of the sand, I was thinking of placing the top soil for the final 4 feet, actually 3 feet so there is still a natural draw into that area, and then I would plant some trees so it looks easy on the eyes.
Would this work? Would the water still flow down through the soil into the weeping tile, and how fast would it flow? Would there be enough moisture in the top soil for trees to grow? Would each horizon stay in their proper place over time (especially the sand top soil layer)? Last, how much (if any) filtering would this provide?
It's just an idea, and so I would love to hear some feedback from someone with expertise or experience in this area. Any ideas are appreciated!
Thanks,
Chad
I have lots of top soil from stripping the pad, but screened rock is expensive. The clay ditch is about 6 feet deep with steep side slopes. The source of water is from both a 16" culvert upstream and from the runoff off the pad. The ditch runs for a couple hundred feet then hits an approach with another culvert, and so on.
It is an important drainage; however, I was thinking of extending 16" perforated pipe from the upstream culvert to the downstream culvert in the bottom of the ditch, then covering the perforated pipe with screened rock to a height of just a few inches above the top of the perforated pipe saving on screened rock. Then I was going to lay a geotextile down to separate the screened rock from the layer above, which I was thinking would be about 4" of sand for filtering. Finally on top of the sand, I was thinking of placing the top soil for the final 4 feet, actually 3 feet so there is still a natural draw into that area, and then I would plant some trees so it looks easy on the eyes.
Would this work? Would the water still flow down through the soil into the weeping tile, and how fast would it flow? Would there be enough moisture in the top soil for trees to grow? Would each horizon stay in their proper place over time (especially the sand top soil layer)? Last, how much (if any) filtering would this provide?
It's just an idea, and so I would love to hear some feedback from someone with expertise or experience in this area. Any ideas are appreciated!
Thanks,
Chad