Stabilizing culvert over muck?

   / Stabilizing culvert over muck? #11  
Yes, because I can cut it off my property. How do you think a course of logs would cost $11,000?
250 ft X 12 ft x 1 ft logs / 128 = 23 cord at $200 a cord =$4687 now add in your cost to install them and your tractor does use fuel and depreciate each hour it is run and your time must be worth something. ? But I'm just being pissy because it's late at night and have done more Micky Mouse projects then I care to remember. Have fun with yours and don't get the tractor stuck in the swamp unless there is a camera present to send the video to us.
 
   / Stabilizing culvert over muck?
  • Thread Starter
#12  
I have 5 acres I want cleared. I can do an acre a day cutting, then hauling is the unknown. My time is free in this case because I enjoy doing the work and it's a project I want to do myself. Sure, the wood being cut has a market value, but it's not a cash expense to the project. I would need to sell far more wood than I need to build the road to offset the expense of excavating the swamp to the clay (which would risk punching through it - something I don't want), I'd then also need to move the spoils outside the wetland at additional expense.

I was spreading 12 yard loads in 20 minutes when they were being delivered last week to do what was done. All 5 were brought in in 4.5 hours and I stopped with the last one because the tractor was just pushing the rock aside and sliding on the mud below (ground was still frozen about 3" down). I hand loaded 5 bucket loads of rock and moved them forward with the tractor rather than scooping and called it quits for the time being. The tractor had no issue at all scooping and moving fist size stone, but the basketball sized rock doesn't go into the bucket well and it's a much more labor intensive process. Sure, if I had a D6 on site it would be a non-issue - that's $2K a week rental and that doesn't cover fuel either.

With the heels, you're looking at 20x250x4' deep for a 12' wide road. By putting wood down, 1' of the 2' of base over the muck is occupied by the wood and the logs should last 50+ years anaerobic (I'll be dead when they rot out). There's 24" downed trees covered in moss and half submerged in the path of the road now that are still quite solid inside the cambium despite being only partially submerged.

You must be a lot harder on your `45 than I am on the `65e. In 9 hours meter time I've only burned about 6 gallons of fuel.
 
   / Stabilizing culvert over muck? #13  
Just curious. You have mentioned numerous times you want to avoid punching a hole in the clay - afraid to drain your swamp. May I ask why? I know wetlands are a valuable resource but would your area miss one small swamp? Is it state protected? You guys do need more mosquito breeding grounds up there!!!
 
   / Stabilizing culvert over muck?
  • Thread Starter
#14  
If I drain it, I'm screwed and will have to pay someone to engineer and oversee it's replacement for 5 years in another spot at a 2:1 ratio. So I'd become responsible for replacing 11 acres of wetland at a cost of about $5/sf!

Outside of that little adverse impact (to me), I'm actually very fond of my swamp and the wildlife who use it. The other day when I was getting some mods done on the tractor across the street from where this road is going, I saw a fisher cruising the snagged tree tops I hadn't yet tugged down and removed. Deer use this for drinking in the winter when everything else is frozen. We have frogs and fish in the deeper sections. Aside from all of that, it acts as my "moat" to keep the neighbors from wandering in.
 
   / Stabilizing culvert over muck? #15  
All wetlands are protected by federal law. Property owners need a permit to so much as clean a ditch with a couple of cat tails growing in it.
Is the sand below the clay not saturated with water and below the water table? I wouldn't think it would be like pulling a tub drain and have it all suck down into the sand.
 
   / Stabilizing culvert over muck? #16  
All wetlands are protected by federal law.

While I am not a wetlands expert, a quick search leads me to believe you may not be either. Perhaps state regulated, but not necessarily Federal regulated.

The 2001 Supreme Court "SWANCC decision" (Solid Waste Agency of Northern Cook County v. United States Army Corps of Engineers et al., 531 U.S. 159) excluded many isolated wetlands from federal regulation. The Supreme Court based this decision on a legal interpretation of jurisdiction under the federal Clean Water Act (CWA). The key factor was the language in the Act that relates to navigable waters. Under Section 404 of the CWA, federal protection extends to those wetlands located on or adjacent to navigable waters of the United States or their tributary systems. Wetlands that do not meet this requirement, such as isolated wetlands with no link to interstate commerce, are not regulated as waters of the United States and are therefore not protected under the CWA
 
   / Stabilizing culvert over muck? #17  
While I am not a wetlands expert, a quick search leads me to believe you may not be either. Perhaps state regulated, but not necessarily Federal regulated.

The 2001 Supreme Court "SWANCC decision" (Solid Waste Agency of Northern Cook County v. United States Army Corps of Engineers et al., 531 U.S. 159) excluded many isolated wetlands from federal regulation. The Supreme Court based this decision on a legal interpretation of jurisdiction under the federal Clean Water Act (CWA). The key factor was the language in the Act that relates to navigable waters. Under Section 404 of the CWA, federal protection extends to those wetlands located on or adjacent to navigable waters of the United States or their tributary systems. Wetlands that do not meet this requirement, such as isolated wetlands with no link to interstate commerce, are not regulated as waters of the United States and are therefore not protected under the CWA

No I'm not an expert but I have applied for and received a few wetlands permits and worked on numerous projects that had permits that needed to be complied with.
The Army corp of engineers has the authority but delegates it to state governments as long as they comply with Corp. standards.
404 - File or directory not found.
 
   / Stabilizing culvert over muck? #18  
No I'm not an expert but I have applied for and received a few wetlands permits and worked on numerous projects that had permits that needed to be complied with. The Army corp of engineers has the authority but delegates it to state governments as long as they comply with Corp. standards. 404 - File or directory not found.

What I took exception to was your blanket statement that said all wetlands are Federally protected, which isn't true.

Small isolated wetlands (ie a marshy area in the middle of farmer Joe's field) are not regulated at the Federal level, and only at the state level if their laws are more stringent then Federal law. These may be drained if desired.

By all means, a person should check prior to draining to make sure you aren't in violation.

Also, it should be known that some states, including my own, will help to establish and or improve existing wetlands.

Sorry for the thread derail, just wanted the correct information out there.
 
   / Stabilizing culvert over muck? #19  
What I took exception to was your blanket statement that said all wetlands are Federally protected, which isn't true.

Small isolated wetlands (ie a marshy area in the middle of farmer Joe's field) are not regulated at the Federal level, and only at the state level if their laws are more stringent then Federal law. These may be drained if desired.

By all means, a person should check prior to draining to make sure you aren't in violation.

Also, it should be known that some states, including my own, will help to establish and or improve existing wetlands.

Sorry for the thread derail, just wanted the correct information out there.

Back in the 70's when this first came in we had a presentation by a guy from A.C.E. named Leech. He was asked what was covered by the new law. He said 1. Everything that was tidal. 2. Everything that was seasonally or perennially inundated. and 3. Everything that was merely moist and supported wetland plants. When asked how big a wetland had to be to require a permit he held up his hands shoulder wide and said about this big. We all laughed but as the presentation went on we came to understand he was not joking. They do allow farmers to do some things but rest assured the authority and final decision power rests with them.
 
   / Stabilizing culvert over muck? #20  
You need a geotextile mat or you have to excavate down to the clay. I'M not sure what your intended traffic is though? That alone will determine how much support your road is going to need.
 

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