Grading What to do about dangerous debris ?

   / What to do about dangerous debris ? #11  
Get your son some heavy soled boots, some thick leather gloves, a small shovel, a coffee can and a metal detector. Pay him for finding the debris. :thumbsup:

After our house was resided and re-roofed, I bought a cheap toy metal detector and paid my kid a nickel a nail. I about went broke! :laughing:

Next time pay him by the can full Moss. :D
I dropped 3 huge fir trees last weekend. These trees had nails and spikes in them from the neighbor kids putting up climbing steps. So I had a friend of mine come over with her good metal detector and paint all of the nails with red paint.. Chainsaws make dangerous metal detectors...:cool:
 
   / What to do about dangerous debris ? #12  
If you have a rental place maybe you could try a Harley Rake. If the material is not too large this might work for you.
 
   / What to do about dangerous debris ? #13  
I would combine a lot of what has been said:
1.Get a big magnet and presweep the area to get loose metal up.
2. Walk it and pick up what you can, then run a bush hog through there - My bush hog usually finds ANYTHING thats not supposed to be there :cool:
3. Shallow plow, disk or till with a rototiller - that should help break up smaller glass and such that you couldn't pick up and loosen subsurface metal.
4. Rake it
5. Do 1-4 again.

That should get most of it up or make it small enough not to worry about. Then add some topsoil to bury the remains and plant grass.
 
   / What to do about dangerous debris ? #14  
I have a few acres and the back couple seem like they were used as a dump by the people that owned the farm the land was originally part of. You can walk across the property a couple times and fill a coffee can with broken glass, metal pieces, and barb wire.

My son has yet to injure himself while playing in the field, which we try to avoid, but the dogs have been hurt several times in the past year.

Does anybody have suggestions on how to remove, or at least reduce the danger caused by the glass and metal shrapnel?

Most of it is too small to catch with a rake.. Thought about tilling and planting a native grass over it, but not sure if that would keep the stuff down.

Thanks in advance for any advice you may have.

What ever ground work you do, rent a tracked machine and use it. Tractor tires are expensive and you could ruin them working on this spot. Clearing forks on the dozer blade would help deal with any big stuff and old wire and then moving clean soil over the top of what was left and seeding it to grass will finish it. If you get most of the big stuff out and do a good job covering the area it should minimize any future problems.
 
   / What to do about dangerous debris ? #15  
Dig a hole / depression Use a drag box / grader and run your tractor in circles and keep dumping about 2" of the top soil ling with all the nails glass etc. into the hole. One all the top soil is in the hole. bury the hole with some clean top soil. Depending on how deep you want the "junk" buried you can go deeper.

Yes if you want burn the scraping of plastic, metal, glass etc with a good size bon fire and that would destroy or render the refuse less dangerous.

Now either plant grass of wild flowers and you have a virgin field to run barefoot in.
 
   / What to do about dangerous debris ? #16  
We had one of those dump areas. :confused2::confused2::confused2: Luck for us it was all above ground, so we had my uncle come in and haul it away.
 
   / What to do about dangerous debris ? #17  
The best bet is to pay someone to bring in tracked machine, either a loader or excavator & dig a large & deep hole (make sure they seperate the topsoil from the rest of the dirt), push everything in it & use some of the dirt that was taken out of the hole (not the topsoil from the hole), to cover the undesired debris with at least a couple of feet of dirt, bringing it up to the topsoil level. Then spread the remaining dirt (again saving the topsoil) to help fill the area that the debris was removed from and bring it up to the topsoil level; spread your topsoil over the entire area, (you may have to scrape a thin layer from elsewhere or bring some more in) to entirely cover the area, seed it, straw it, and let it grow.

The cost should not be very much as it will take an experienced operator less than a day to do everything (you can do your own seeding & strawing). The money you save from buying tractor tires or parts will be worth it in the long run.
 
   / What to do about dangerous debris ? #18  
YOu could bury it. Sitting here trying to think of a way to "filter" it. If its all on the surface, you could run it thru screens and remove all the contaminants. Of course, that would take some time and a considerable amount of labor..
 
   / What to do about dangerous debris ?
  • Thread Starter
#19  
I like the hole idea, but man that will be a big hole.. Figure a 3" depth on probably 2 acres. Just using straight coverage that is ~403 cu yd per acre. WOW! Not likely going to be able to do it that way..
 
   / What to do about dangerous debris ? #20  
I like the hole idea, but man that will be a big hole.. Figure a 3" depth on probably 2 acres. Just using straight coverage that is ~403 cu yd per acre. WOW! Not likely going to be able to do it that way..

Now I'm confused again. Or still?:confused: I started to reply, but by the time I was finished the number had appeared in your post. Did you update, or is my LWMEC (looking with my eyes closed) acting up again?

Either way you are right; that would be a BIG hole. (But fun to dig):thumbsup:
 

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