Gully through the property

   / Gully through the property #21  
It is nice having a gully on the property as it gives you somewhere to toss yard waste. Toss your rocks, branches, grass clippings, stumps, fence posts, etc for years and not fill it up.
 
   / Gully through the property #22  
I have a gully, it was a mill race. half of it i use to pile brush. No water sits in it ever.
 
   / Gully through the property #23  
That must be a California thing. In Mississippi they fill it with cast off appliances and tires for erosion control.
Then plant kudzu for good measure.
 
   / Gully through the property #24  
They planted I think a type of willow here along the banks. Now it is invasive and very hard to kill and remove.
My ravines are full of 1950s cars, appliances etc. I wish all that junk was gone but it was here before me. Some of the items are slowly breaking down over time. I wish mine were open, they are over 50 feet deep and more than that across. Getting no bigger.
Your situation is different and more manageable. Hope you can find a good solution.
 
   / Gully through the property #25  
That must be a California thing. In Mississippi they fill it with cast off appliances and tires for erosion control.
I thought the cast off appliances went in front of the Double Wide.

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   / Gully through the property #26  
The issue with a gully is that if you fill it, the soil will be softer then the surrounding soil, so it will wash away when you get a heavy rain.

In order to stop this, you need something in there to hold the soil in place. Busted up concrete works great for this. It slows down the water and allows the soil to build up behind it.

Depending on the length of the ditch, you should build up several "dams" of broken up concrete or large rocks to hold the dirt in place and slow down the water.

On my land, I also use used and broken bricks, cinder blocks and even tile from jobs that I've worked on. I just keep building it up until I'm at the height of the surrounding soil. Most of the time I don't even need to add dirt, it just starts filling up on its own.
Brush, small trees and slash also work well.
 
   / Gully through the property #27  
I have a valley - smack dab in the middle of my mile long driveway. You drop 20 feet into the valley - 130 feet across the valley - then up the other side and back onto the level driveway.

We came down from Alaska in '82. Didn't bring enough gold to bridge the valley. The contractor started with broken concrete - then railroad ballast - then heavy pit run - etc, etc, etc.

There is a twelve inch culvert at the base of this construction. I've been here 43 years and not a single drop of water has EVER come down the valley.

Over 30 years ago - the culvert became "home" to an extended raccoon family. Both sides of the culvert are well camouflaged - you have to look pretty hard to find either side now.
 
   / Gully through the property #28  
I would do a series of dikes from the bank to the middle of the gulley (only half of its width) in the outside corners where the erosion is a issue, that would avoid further erosion on that bank and add sediments behind them adding soil. That be a simple and easy solution.
 
   / Gully through the property #29  
I would do a series of dikes from the bank to the middle of the gulley (only half of its width) in the outside corners where the erosion is a issue, that would avoid further erosion on that bank and add sediments behind them adding soil. That be a simple and easy solution.
Why only half width? All the specs I’ve seen extend the full width. The purpose is to raise the grade behind the dike as soil erodes and is deposited. Then you add more dikes on top to keep raising the gully.
 
   / Gully through the property #30  
Why only half width? All the specs I’ve seen extend the full width. The purpose is to raise the grade behind the dike as soil erodes and is deposited. Then you add more dikes on top to keep raising the gully.

Well one can do one or the other depending on your goal, my reasoning is to not restrict flow during flood season and reduce erosion on the desire bank with minimum effort or work... the issue with full width is water can erode on the extremity of the dam (on one or each side) during high flow, less likely with half width. I mean if ops want to retain water to have a pond then obviously what I am suggesting won't work for that.
 

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