January-February 2006

Hydroseeding Strategies

Experts discuss what they use in the mix and how to apply it.

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By Carol Brzozowski

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Jonathan Colbert, owner of Acacia Erosion Control in Santa Barbara, CA, has observed over the past decade that hydroseeding is claiming an increasing market segment in erosion control. Others in his field share his view; Jason Henderson, vice president of Green Thumb in Nehawka, NE, calls himself "a real big believer in hydroseeding.

"With the sod, you are paying for the green color right off the bat—that's the only good thing I see," says Henderson. "The problem is it still takes the same amount of water to get it going and to keep it alive. With hydroseeding, you go in, spray it down, and you're going to get a lot better root system. You're putting your tackifier on there, so it holds everything together and makes it stick to the ground. With sod, if you get a big rain it could wash out and you'd have to go back in and pull it."

Colbert cautions that hydroseeding is not a panacea, "but it certainly has a lot of good applications." His company's recent jobs illustrate that point. After the January 2005 floods in Ventura County, CA, his company was involved in an emergency erosion control project for the California Department of Transportation.

California Highway 23 between Fillmore and Moorpark "fell apart" after the floods, Colbert recalls. "The Santa Clara River flooded the road in the riverbed. The same road winds up over a small mountain pass and the mountains fell apart, so they had to put the sides of the roads back together," he explains.

Part of the rehabilitation called for hydroseeding and jute blanketing. Colbert could not get jute blankets within the time frame necessary, partly because they had been in high demand following the rains and floods.

"I'm not a fan of jute anyway, so this was an opportunity to sell them on the idea of using bonded fiber matrix instead," Colbert says. He chose to go with Flexterra, a hydraulically applied product made by Profile. "It's pretty expensive—top-of-the-line—but still less than jute and much less expensive on labor, because you spray it," he says. "It's a better growing medium than any kind of a blanket. You spray it on at 3,500 pounds per acre, a high rate for anything sprayed with a hydroseeding machine—most mulches go on at around 2,000 pounds per acre."

Colbert got good results. "The cool thing about bonded fiber matrix, as opposed to other hydroseeding, is you don't have to use binders or tackifiers, because it's got all of that in it," he says.

The project involved just under 6 acres in a two-month time span in early 2005. What made it different from many other projects for Colbert was its steep slopes. "It was nice to have the spray-on application so I didn't have to have guys out there doing blanket work," he says. "I believe in blankets, but I don't like jute netting. The other challenge is getting stuff to grow in California. I wanted the best growing medium that would retain moisture for the longest amount of time so those plants had a good chance of success.

"Basically, you have to plan around the rain, and you have only about a three-month window of rain from December through February or sometimes January through March. The trickiest thing is whether or not to plant," he adds. "At the end of the season, it's almost better not to plant. I have to tell the owners I think we are going to get a false start, so why don't we just wait until fall. As a contractor, that's hard to do."

Testing New Products and Techniques
One reason hydroseeding is taking an increasing erosion control market share is the introduction and testing of new products. Through the prompting of the Wilbur-Ellis Co. in Spokane, WA, Tom Mackey, owner of Northwest Tree and Reclamation in Bonners Ferry, ID, received permission from the Idaho Department of Transportation to use HydroStraw from Pelletized Straw for a field test in July 2005 before final approval on a new road construction project for US Highway 95. HydroStraw is a composition of annually renewable organic fibers, Silt Stop PAM (polyacrylamide) tackifier, and other additives.

PHOTO: ACACIA
Acacia combines BMPs for temporary and permanent erosion control.

Mackey says that because HydroStraw was a new product to his company as well as to the state, he wanted to do a test run. The project application required 4,000 pounds. "That's typically double the normal application, but they wanted assurance the soil was stabilized," he says, adding his company was able to shoot the product at the rate of 2 tons per acre.

Mackey's company is doing the soil stabilization and post-construction revegetation for the highway. The two-stage project is expected to be completed by October 2007 and includes ongoing erosion control, soil stabilization, and hydromulching before final revegetation.

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Mackey says his company obtained favorable results using HydroStraw for soil stabilization. "From typical wood fiber mulch, we are able to go from 1,150 pounds per load to l,750 pounds, so we are able to do 600 more pounds per load with this product," he says. "Another reason we like using it is because it mixes very easily, and in application, it falls into place very nicely. Instead of doing two applications, we can do it with one."

HydroStraw also got field tested in an upscale residential area of California at Norris Canyon, a large canyon in San Ramon, CA. The area has lots of steep slopes and sandy soil. Lucinda Dustin, a senior stormwater management consultant with Stevens, Ferrone & Bailey Engineering Co. in Concord, CA, was approached about trying the product, because essentially it's an alternative to blowing straw, she says. Next Page >

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