Old projects never die -- in my case, they just never get finished. /w3tcompact/icons/crazy.gif
Last year I bored y'all with my 100-foot stretch of muddy road that kept me from reaching most of my property last winter. I got some terrific advice from this board about how to build it up proper-like by laying down coarse and then fine crush after removing what I could of the organic stuff and laying down some geotextile road fabric.
I still intend to do just that, but since the ol' budget took a real header this year, I've had to put off buying the materials until (hopefully) next year. /w3tcompact/icons/frown.gif What I've done instead is scraped it down as best I could with the box blade and rippers, lowering the road bed about 8" to a foot. It's amazing how that gooey stuff turned into a concrete-like substance when it dried out. Remind me to attack it before it bakes out next time. /w3tcompact/icons/tongue.gif
My only hope for this winter is to divert as much of the runoff as possible from the road itself. To that end, I dug a shallow drainage trench from the low point of the road to a nearby creek. Would have done a better job, but I was using my Armstrong Oh-My-Aching Backhoe. /w3tcompact/icons/wink.gif
Not really looking for advice this time -- just sharing my meager tractor exploits. Pictures attached.
p.s. Winter can't seem to get going out here. Less than an inch of rain on the one day we had it. Dug out my long-sleeve shirts for a few days, then put them away again. /w3tcompact/icons/crazy.gif