Started working on this last fall just before it started raining. Now that the irrigation is turned off and it has started to dry up it is time to get started again. My wife on her Kubota BX 2670 and me on my Kubota L 2600 both with box blades. The boxes are set so we get a full load on each trip across the pond. The old pond in the picture was fill up with some of the dirt. We are going down to five feet or so. Wife used her loader to square up the bank. When we get though the new pond will be 100 x 250. The soil was a loam for the first 2 feet now down to clay. We have moved some of the dirt around the farm with the BX and the RTV 900. So far we worked on it about 10 hours each. The first Picture is the old pond then, The second picture is the old pond now, The third picture is the spillway, The fourth picture is what it looks like now. We are now down 30 inches.
I rented a box blade this week. It was the first time I'd run one. When it comes time to dig a pond, I think I may try some of it myself, these box blades are so dang handy! Looks like fun, nice work!
The weather caught us on the pond plus I have had a rough 2 weeks. It is only 1/2 the size we wanted it. We got 6 inches of rain in 18 hours plus about 60 acres drains into the pond so she is full. I guess next fall we will start again. So here are the pictures.
1999 Bobcat 763F John Deer 850 Grasshopper 723K H2
Did you pump it out? We'll be starting to re-do our pond next week. Been 30 years since its been touched. But have to drain it first....
I like your pond, too.
Well it is gonna take a while to dry up now that it is getting cool and short days. No we did not pump it out, guess we will wait till year. Right now the pond is somewhere around 85 ft by 175 x near 5 foot deep. We have almost 30 hours each. To speed up up digging I put my disc on the 3000 so we could dig twice the dirt as before. Our pond has come a long way from what we had. This is our third pond. The first is about 1 1/4 acres and 10 feet to 14 feet deep and we paid to have it dug out $5000 ouch!!!. The second we re-dug out in the heat of summer when it was dry 4-5 foot deep about 1/4 acre and it took about 2 weeks just my wife and me. Hoping I can trade for a older TLB next spring. Good luck on your pond I know you will enjoy it. I find tractor work weather mowing, digging a pond or gardening is relaxing.
Ford: '88 3910 Series II, '80 3600, '65 3000; '07 6530C Branson with FEL, 2020 LS MT225S. Case-IH 395 and 895 with cab. All Diesels
You'll be thankful for the clay. On the rest of it you may have to wait a few years before it seals adequately. Even with 100%i clay it took about 3 years for my seeping to stop when at spillway level.
Watch your spillway. Falling water can eventually erode the dirt back to the main pool. Get her grassed over as soon as you can. Rye is perfect for the job and this time of year. Get some 12 24 12 and broadcast that and the rye. Run a harrow or section of chain link fence over it to get it in the ground with a little soil cover. Should sprout in a few days. If that fails rocks (12" dia or so). If that fails a horn.
My spillway had eroded to the depth of 6' and was within 20 feet of the pool. I could stand with my stomach touching dirt (straight vertical drop off) and my eyes were even with the dam spillway. I installed a 3' x20' drop horn I cut and bent into an ell (5 x 15) and concreted around it to make a bowl. Been maintenance free for about 20 years. On a heavy rain with lots of runoff (back when we had rain) the water would roar going into the horn and would come out just a gentle as a baby.