I had these horses sinking in up to 2 feet deep in some spots, so I
finally had to move them, which they are now on fairly solid ground,
but have no shelter except trees until I build something. Anyhow, I
have decided to abandon this paddock in front of the barn because it's
always been muddy and because of that, I cant get wheelbarrows and
especially my tractor inside to clean manure. Its so bad now, I had
to remove a sheet of the tin siding in the rear just to get hay in
there to the indoor animals. Of course that means crawling between
the horizontal boards.
To solve this mess, I plan to pour a concrete pad in front of the
door. The problem is I dont see this mud getting really dry anytime
soon. There is still water seeping out the edges of it and running
down the hill next to it. Another farmer told me it probably will not
dry at all this fall, and I will have to wait until we get another dry
spell next summer. Well, I cant wait that long. I need to be able to
get into that barn in a normal manner again.
My plan is to drape a tarp over the area in front of the door so that
it wont get rained on again, and run a few large livestock fans to
blow under that tarp to help it dry. Then as soon as it firms up,
pour concrete over it. But can I pour concrete over semi firm mud? I
know the concrete will harden, and if I put some rebar in it, it
should remain a solid pad. It will be about 10 x 16 feet.
Will this work? I wont drive any heavy tractors on it for awhile, but
right now I can not even walk across it without losing my boots.
I dont see any other way to do this. The only other option would be
to get some heavy equipment to scoop out all the mud about 2 or 3 feet
deep truck it away, and bring in loads of dry soil. But that is not
affordable, and pouring concrete over fresh fill seems like it would
be worse than the mud because the fresh soil would not be settled.
(The remainder of that paddock will become lawn after it dries enough.
I cant forsee using it for horses anymore, other than just letting
them mow the lawn for me when the weather is real dry.
Anyone have any advice?
Thanks
Gary
Lime slurry injection, lime blending, fly ash blending work at
water proofing subsoils, especially clay soils. I would need more
information to help more. Contact your local ag county agent,
they may have much better ideas that work in your locality.
--
______________________________
Keep the whole world singing . . . .
DanG (remove the sevens)
dgri...@7cox.net
<gba...@myhome.com> wrote in message
news:04iid3tfri409cjqr...@4ax.com...
I'm w/ DanG on this...first problem sounds like poor drainage since you
say it's always been a muddy spot, the recent deluge just made it worse.
Need to fix the drainage first and let it dry out. It will eventually
dry, even in the upper midwest you've got some time before fall.
For temporary access, I'd be looking at floating some ply or other sheet
goods over the area...they would likely be sufficient bearing surface to
at least allow foot traffic as things gradually begin to dry out.
The pad on top w/o fixing the problem will probably be "ok" for a while,
but it's likely going to sink (and inevitably in the direction where it
will channel water in, not out of your barn) and if you do drive
equipment over it w/ no better sub-base than that, it _will_ crack up
sooner rather than later...
--
Not without problems. If it were me ,I would put down crushed 3/4" stone
first to solve your water problem .Good luck .
Harry
Or you can do like they do in New Orleans when they pour large slabs -
drive posts into the mud until you hit solid footing. Of course in
N.O. they drive multiple telephone poles stacked end-to-end before
they get to solid earth, but I don't think you'll need that.
Red
You need to dig out about 8" of mud, will that get you nearer to solid
ground ? Then lay down some white plastic 3-4" sloping drain pipe either
enclosed in a "sock" or at least covered by draintile paper to keep dirt/mud
out of the pipe. Run it over to the 'hill' you mention where it can dispose
of the water.
After that backfill the excavated area with "road base" or 1" minus gravel
and compact with a roller or plate compactor and THEN you can form up and
pour your concrete on top of the gravel base.
>
> Anyone have any advice?
>
The major oil companies are planning on building all manner of thing on the
ANWAR mud (fluid mud or frozen mud... depending on the breaks). You might
inquire there.