Building Lake Corona

   / Building Lake Corona
  • Thread Starter
#591  
Wow! More than double what I was thinking. :thumbsup: Even more impressive now.

Should be at least 1.5 but I'm guessing closer to 2. There is a 2nd ravine not shown in my pics that I still need to work on. Water will push back into this area as well. This is actually where most of the runoff is entering the pond from a neighbors hay field. This will be the last area I'll tackle. There will be a lot of topsoil that comes out of this area. I'll use it to cover the completed dam.

Pic5
 
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   / Building Lake Corona #592  
In regards to compaction. A bonus to using a "small" piece of equipment is the number of trips to complete the task. A CTL isn't an ideal compaction tool but your thin lifts and repetition will overcome that shortfall.

It takes a LOT of material to add a foot of dam height once you get close to being done. A LOT.
 
   / Building Lake Corona #593  
...I think if I was going to build one, the first thing I would do is to put a large (8"-12") pipe in the bottom and lay it through the dam, so I could keep the pond drained through out the project. ...

The pipe will act as a path for water to leak. They make baffles that can be fitted around the pipe that slow this down from happening, but eventually, every dam will leak with a pipe through it. Water never gives up, and it might take decades, but eventually, it will work it's way along the outer edges of the pipe. And that's if it's all compacted super good all the way around the pipe. If you don't compact it to near 100% compaction, it will leak sooner. Do you know how hard it is to compact soil under a pipe?
 
   / Building Lake Corona #594  
They call them "Seep Collars" here in Missouri. Every pond/lake pipe has one welded to the steel overflow pipe. A piece of 1/4" thick sheet metal 3' square with the pipe going thru the center of it.
 
   / Building Lake Corona #595  
The pipe will act as a path for water to leak. They make baffles that can be fitted around the pipe that slow this down from happening, but eventually, every dam will leak with a pipe through it. Water never gives up, and it might take decades, but eventually, it will work it's way along the outer edges of the pipe. And that's if it's all compacted super good all the way around the pipe. If you don't compact it to near 100% compaction, it will leak sooner. Do you know how hard it is to compact soil under a pipe?

Also, if you live in gopher country, they will burrow beside invariably just like they do irrigation lines. Especially lawn irrigation lines. Compaction doesn't' deter them at all. I rebuilt a back driveway at our place shortly after we bought it because it had just been busted through without any concern for drainage. I re-graded it.scarified it, and rolled it with a 5 ton double drum roller, with plenty of moisture added. I checked it after with a steel probe and it was tight. I then topped it with reground asphalt cuttings 4" thick and added moisture and rolled them with the same machine. Next morning there was 2 spots where gophers made their presence known. I'll bet their digging claws were nubbins but they did it. You can't beat Mother Nature.
 
   / Building Lake Corona
  • Thread Starter
#598  
Any updates on this?

Sorry. No real updates. Work and life have interrupted this project so have only worked for a few hours on it since my last post. I'm planning on stopping by the plumbing house today to price and hopefully order pipe for the siphon drain. Center of the dam is at the waterline. Would like to get the pipe in then finish building the dam. Waterline is about 2 feet lower than I wanted. Any higher and I'm going to be pushing past the 15 ft limit before getting into approvals and engineering and don't want that.
 
   / Building Lake Corona
  • Thread Starter
#599  
I also picked up a 2" trash pump from harbor freight yesterday so I can get the rest of the water in the bottom of the pond out. That's the plan for today.
 
   / Building Lake Corona
  • Thread Starter
#600  
I also picked up a 2" trash pump from harbor freight yesterday so I can get the rest of the water in the bottom of the pond out. That's the plan for today.


Pump worked great. Was able to remove almost all but a few inches of water. Ordered everything for the siphon drain today as well. The supply house had the pipe in stock but had to order some of the fittings. Going with 10". This should handle 99% of the rains. I'll create an emergency spillway and will probably line with a lot of the limestone I've pulled out during excavation to help with erosion during an overflow event.
 

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