Brandi,
That was one of my plans. But I was going to pour a straight wall land support it with three piers that would be on the backside of the dam. After thinking about what it would take to do this, I came up with putting rebar into the pad and angleing it into the dam wall. This is how I came up with angleing the entire back side of the dam. At two feet, I think I have enough strength. In fact, I kept going bigger, until I thought I'm at over kill and then some with my thickness.
Pilot,
Thanks for the picture. I love the rock and very will might use some after the pad. Trnasistioning from the concrete pad to the rock has me scratching my head, but I'm thinking of just adding more concrete there to hold the rocks together and not let the water undermine them. Here, I don't have to pay tax on river rock, so that's what I'll use if I decide it's something I need to have.
Ranger,
Yes, it will be right at the edge of the blocks, almost sttaight above the dam. There are a lot of logs and stumps in there, but very little flows to the spillway. They are all locked together in piles and have stayed in position since I built the piles. There will be some floating stuff, but I'm hoping that with regular mowing and cleanup, I should be able to handle it. Even so, I'm sure that I will have something jam into there and cause me problems. My thought is that it's wide enough to handle it without stoping water flow, and strong enough to hold it if it happens. Lots of guessing here, so the possibility of failure is always there.
Dennis,
Thanks. It's tedius and time consuming, but also fun and satisfying. I've been planning this for years, and havent' started it because I didn't have it figured out, then didn't have the time, or the water was too high. Now seems to be the time to do it, I just need some dry weather so I can get an 80,000 lb concrete truck down there safely.
Eddie