Keeping the water back
11/03/03 10:11 AM Attachment
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Here is my situation. I am working on some property that I am buying from my grandmother. I hope to build a house there next year. The property has a creek that runs year round and about once a year or two we get that rare rain that get the creek way up. The creek has a high bank on one side, about 3 feet higher than normal level. There is one spot that the bank is only 6" to a foot and that is where the water comes spilling over. I want to fix the low spot and I want to fix it good. The spot is about 15-20 wide. I have consider stacking quik crete and driving rebar through the bags and then backfilling on the dry side with dirt. Any suggestions. I am attaching a picture of where my driveway will be and what it looked like back in May when we had about 3 hard days of rain. At this time I only added about 6" of dirt to my future driveway.
Re: Keeping the water back
[re: Tractors4]
11/14/03 08:23 AM
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Tractors4,
Talk to the Corps of Engineers and/or the state environmental aganecies. If sounds like you want to build up the land to stop the creek from overflowing. That might be illegal.
If its ok to do I would talk to an engineer on how to build up the bank so that it is less likely to fail.
Re: Keeping the water back
[re: Tractors4]
11/15/03 09:16 AM
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I have seen that bag trick used in some hiway jobs where they had periodic....but relatively rare.....flooding and they wanted to line the banks around a culvert. It is, however not commonly used for what you are considering. Normally, a creek bank is raised by backfilling with "very dirty" 3/4-minus gravel and then covered with dirt from either the surrounding area, or import. Creeks can scour pretty effectively at high water levels, so a larger, longer, dirt bank would be perferrable to a smaller bank made of bags. What might end up happening is that you would end up with an island of bags with water rushing by on the ends.
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