dustinfox
Gold Member
Kind of hard to compare a french drain with a hole in the ground that doesn't go anywhere.
Leech fields rely on the soil perculating, or absorbing the fluids in the lines. Depending on the soil, this might take a trench 100 feet long, or 300 feet long. It depends on the surface area and how well the soil absorbs moisture. This is also a very shallow trench designed to get the water to soak into the ground.
The reason a post rots out is moisture. Mostly the getting wet and drying out procces. This is why posts rot out at the surface, because the area around the post settles and becomes a bowl. If you can built up the soil or concrete around the post, it will shed water and in theory, last it maximum lifespan.
While I cant say that gravel at the bottom of the hole will hold enough water to cause any issues, I don't see where it will help anything. I think somebody got an idea that this will lead to allowing water to drain away from the post faster, but forgot that 3 feet down or more, the ground doesn't perk worth a darn and any water that gets in that hole, stays in that hole. Giving it more space to stay longer doesn't make any sense to me.
Eddie
Thanks again Eddie for your helpful and valuable input. I understand what you are saying. If this is the case then, from a moisture control perspective, it makes no difference what you put at the bottom of the hole because it is the native soil below which will determine how much moisture collects at the bottom. I have to believe though, that stone would not absorb moisture the way that concrete would. I only need to look at the floor in my garage on a humid day to see how the concrete absorbs moisture. Perhaps a large flat rock would be a better alternative for stability.