Patrick,
The trees area concern and originally were not going to be so close to the dam. In fact, the dam was going to be about a quarter of the size it turned out to be. I just kept making it bigger and bigger until I just looked right. This is totally my perspective, but the size of the dam gives it a look that I really like.
The trees that were going to be on the back of the dam are long gone. But I made the dam so much bigger, that it's on top of the side of the trees. One side of the tree has a dam on it. The other side is left untouched.
The vast majority of the trees are sweetgums, which in my experience are about impossible to kill. Meadowlark was here and he told me they will probably all die in a few years. I'm not conviced they will, but he knows allot more than I do. It's one of those things I'm gonna take a wait and see aproach.
The roots are a concern. I might be just stuborn here, but the distance from the trunk to the lake is over 50 feet at the closest. To me, that just seems too far for the roots to travel when there's no eveidence of them doing that.
Again, this is another wait and see issue.
The log pile is cleaned up and all the mixed soil, soot and burn pile remains is gone. Probably close to a thousand yards. Now my dad and I are hauling clean fill to widen the dam to twice it's current thickness, then build up the picnic area and side slopes.
Fuel is my biggest expense. Today I bought 200 gallons of farm diesel for $2.41 a gallon. The picture is of my fuel trailer filling up my backhoe.
Eddie