kebo
Elite Member
- Joined
- May 16, 2006
- Messages
- 2,928
- Location
- Lexington, SC
- Tractor
- 2001 John Deere 790 4x4, bar tires
First, I have to apologize for only having three pic's to show you all cause I know how everyone likes to see pic's of tractors at work!
What happened was I took three pics before I started working, then the camera wouldn't take anymore - error message on screen said "no available memory". I had no way to offload any pic files amd make room, but later on I thought maybe I could have deleted some but it was too late then. So, I didn't get any of the "after" pic's. 
Anyway, my seat time today was at my hunt club. It's like 70 miles from where I live but only 8 miles from where my folks live (which is where I keep my tractor at). I had left my boxblade down at the cabin last month to grade the dirtroad off the main paved road, and the dirt driveway down to the cabin as well. So I went down there today to finally move it back to my parent's house.
My hunt club is fortunate to have a 3+ acre pond about 200 yards down the hill from the cabin at our club lease. A couple weeks ago I had talked with my hunt club president and he said when I go down there to see if I could work on the spillway at the pond. We've had trouble with beavers in the pond past few years who keep damming up the spillway. Boy, he wasn't kidding this time!
This first pic below is looking at where we usually cross the spillway. The trail goes underneath where the BB is sitting up in the air, and then more to the right and then up a pretty steep hill. Look close and you can see the path the atv tires have made right under the BB. Ordinarily, this crossing is very shallow and narrow enough you can walk across it and hardly even get your shoes wet. In the summer, it's usually just a trickle, or bonedry if we're having a drought. I estimate the deepest part now is probably about 2.5ft in the middle of it.
Here is the first problem. This is looking downstream slightly, I was standing up on the tractor when I made this pic. If you closely, you can see the spillway is dammed up on the far side of it. I think it was dammed up on the left (near) side too but it looked to me like maybe recent heavy rains had pushed that part of it downstream. Anyway, that little "diversion canal" to the left where the big rotten pine is laying at WAS NOT THERE last summer. When they dammed up the far side, it diverted the water around to the left side. But, there is still enough of a dam left to really flood the crossing area as you see can. The big rotten pine tree isn't all there now, I was able to push on it enough to break off a 6ft section and then shove it downstream about 10 ft.
Here is the last picture I was able to take. This is just where the spillway actually starts at. The water on the right hand side of the dam (in the very middle) is actually in the pond itself. If you look real close, you can see the beaver dam as it snakes through the small willows and saplings to the far side. We need to cut down all those saplings and get them out of the way!!
Anyway, I then proceeded to clean up the lower part of the spillway first. I was able to clean out that little "diversion canal" on the near side pretty good. I was also able to break off a big section of that pine and push it downstream to the very far end of the spillway where it has a 4-5 ft drop and it then becomes a creek.
Next I tried to ford the crossing to see if could push that dam down on the far side of the spillway. No go!! As I got half way across it, the right front tire dropped off in a hole and completely disappeared!!
Had to back off and save that for later. So next I got the tractor turned around facing up stream and got the FEL blade just over the dam (on the side of the big water) and put it in reverse and drug out a 4ft section of the dam. Boy, it was on then!!! A huge torrent of water starting coming down the spillway and it went up a good foot or more almost instantly!!
Before the water got any deeper, I was able to go back up and get another 2-3 ft section of it and drag that down to where it was in the current. I figured the swift water would take care of most of that smaller debris I had pulled out.
So by now the water was REALLY flowing down the spillway. This was really all I could do for today. I'm going to try and get back up there next weekend with a couple of my club members and see if we can do a better job of cleaning it out. Hopefully, the pond will have come down enough and I'll be able to get across the spillway and work on the other side too. When I left out of there, it sounded like little Niagra falls. There's a 6 ft watefall in the creek just a few yards down from the spillway where the water drops into a pool. It gets pretty noisy when there's a lot water flowing into it, like today lol!! I'll get a pic of the waterfall too on my next trip up there. Again, sorry for no "after" pics. I'll offload a bunch of pic's before my next trip up to make sure I have enough memory!
Anyway, my seat time today was at my hunt club. It's like 70 miles from where I live but only 8 miles from where my folks live (which is where I keep my tractor at). I had left my boxblade down at the cabin last month to grade the dirtroad off the main paved road, and the dirt driveway down to the cabin as well. So I went down there today to finally move it back to my parent's house.
My hunt club is fortunate to have a 3+ acre pond about 200 yards down the hill from the cabin at our club lease. A couple weeks ago I had talked with my hunt club president and he said when I go down there to see if I could work on the spillway at the pond. We've had trouble with beavers in the pond past few years who keep damming up the spillway. Boy, he wasn't kidding this time!
This first pic below is looking at where we usually cross the spillway. The trail goes underneath where the BB is sitting up in the air, and then more to the right and then up a pretty steep hill. Look close and you can see the path the atv tires have made right under the BB. Ordinarily, this crossing is very shallow and narrow enough you can walk across it and hardly even get your shoes wet. In the summer, it's usually just a trickle, or bonedry if we're having a drought. I estimate the deepest part now is probably about 2.5ft in the middle of it.

Here is the first problem. This is looking downstream slightly, I was standing up on the tractor when I made this pic. If you closely, you can see the spillway is dammed up on the far side of it. I think it was dammed up on the left (near) side too but it looked to me like maybe recent heavy rains had pushed that part of it downstream. Anyway, that little "diversion canal" to the left where the big rotten pine is laying at WAS NOT THERE last summer. When they dammed up the far side, it diverted the water around to the left side. But, there is still enough of a dam left to really flood the crossing area as you see can. The big rotten pine tree isn't all there now, I was able to push on it enough to break off a 6ft section and then shove it downstream about 10 ft.

Here is the last picture I was able to take. This is just where the spillway actually starts at. The water on the right hand side of the dam (in the very middle) is actually in the pond itself. If you look real close, you can see the beaver dam as it snakes through the small willows and saplings to the far side. We need to cut down all those saplings and get them out of the way!!

Anyway, I then proceeded to clean up the lower part of the spillway first. I was able to clean out that little "diversion canal" on the near side pretty good. I was also able to break off a big section of that pine and push it downstream to the very far end of the spillway where it has a 4-5 ft drop and it then becomes a creek.
Next I tried to ford the crossing to see if could push that dam down on the far side of the spillway. No go!! As I got half way across it, the right front tire dropped off in a hole and completely disappeared!!
So by now the water was REALLY flowing down the spillway. This was really all I could do for today. I'm going to try and get back up there next weekend with a couple of my club members and see if we can do a better job of cleaning it out. Hopefully, the pond will have come down enough and I'll be able to get across the spillway and work on the other side too. When I left out of there, it sounded like little Niagra falls. There's a 6 ft watefall in the creek just a few yards down from the spillway where the water drops into a pool. It gets pretty noisy when there's a lot water flowing into it, like today lol!! I'll get a pic of the waterfall too on my next trip up there. Again, sorry for no "after" pics. I'll offload a bunch of pic's before my next trip up to make sure I have enough memory!