January-February 2007

Hydroseeding

An industry evolving

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By Roberta Baxter

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Lucinda Dustin, senior stormwater management consultant for Stevens, Ferrone & Bailey of Concord, CA, specifies wood mulch products for many projects. For large projects where huge plots of land are opened up for development, hydroseeding is the most economical application. Many projects are using BFM materials alone without seeding. Dustin says that areas where EcoMatrix has been used in this way have been stabilized without seed growth for up to a year.

One challenge Dustin has seen with BFMs is that they form such a heavy crust that germination and plant breakthrough is hampered, especially in dry weather. If the products can be applied just before the rainy season, better vegetation is the result.

One large project for which Dustin specified materials is the Diablo Grande development in the central valley of California. The 3,000-acre development is a combination of residential areas, golf courses, hotels, and commercial plots, and the project will take several years to build. In 2002, 30 truckloads of EcoMatrix were put down to stabilize acres of disturbed land. Hydroseeding techniques were the most economical choice for the soil stabilization. Even areas that were not seeded held for more than two years.

In California, many projects are requesting native seeds, so Dustin usually applies custom mixes, including grasses and wildflowers. For high-profile areas to look their best, more wildflowers are added to the mix.

An advantage of these types of products, according to Dustin, is the all-in-one-bag mix. “I want consistency,” she says. If a contractor has to mix the product, there is an opportunity for inconsistency in the mix and the application. She doesn’t want to have to walk several acres to see if the product is applied evenly. With premixed products, labor costs are decreased because she can do a bag count at the end of the day and know that the proper amount of product was applied.

Photo: Dietz

Dustin, who has been in the industry for about 11 years, believes the only place for sod is in a high-profile area that must be green “right now.” In most other areas, she prefers hydroseeding, but “everything, each technique, has its place,” she notes. She will specify blankets in waterways where the measures have to hold up to water velocity or be standing in water.

All in the Timing in Ohio
When a motel in Fort Smith, OH, needed erosion control measures along banks with slopes of more than 2:1, Tim Luers’s company Henderson Turf Farms of Franklin, OH, applied interlocking-fiber mulch with heavy amounts of tackifier and crown vetch seed for fast germination. Using Finn HydroSeeders, Luers has undertaken a number of projects using different hydromulches and seed mixes. “Sod,” he says, “is mostly used for aesthetic purposes—the front of a building or along ditch lines that are highly erosive.”

He has used similar techniques for projects near a Wal-Mart store building, parks, and schools. Athletic fields, he says, require a careful consideration of the timing. If the field will be in use quickly, more expensive sod will be needed. If a few months are available before games begin, hydroseeding will give good coverage at a lower cost.

A park in Cincinnati was one of Luers’s larger projects. The park covers 180 acres, and about 120 of those were hydroseeded with mulch and a grass/wildflower mix. Most of the land is fairly flat. Some areas, about 50 acres, were seeded, fertilized, and covered with straw.

Fire Emergency
After a fire destroyed vegetation along California’s Highway 18 near Big Bear Mountain in 2005, Hydrosprout of Escondido, CA, was called in by the California Department of Transportation. The fear was that heavy rains on the slopes laid bare by fire would undercut the highway. Hydrosprout was able to get rolling in 24 hours and began spraying the 100 acres of slope with Canfor’s EcoFibre wood mulch at 3,000 pounds per acre and Terra Novo’s EarthGuard at 10 gallons per acre. An extra challenge was the crust and ash left by the fire. Included in the mixture was a native seed mix. About a month later, the vegetation had not quite started when heavy rains struck the area. The rains caused flash flooding in some areas, but the area treated by Hydrosprout held.

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Originally, BFM had been specified for this emergency highway project, according to Leo Brindis of Hydrosprout. He recommended a change to EarthGuard SFM, a fiber matrix soil stabilizer. In tests by San Diego State University, application of EarthGuard reduced sediment runoff by 95% over bare soil. The stabilizer is designed to be used in combination with mulch, seed, and fertilizers. Brindis says that although the BFM generally encapsulates the soil particles, with fire damage, this would not be possible. EarthGuard actually treats the soil, giving it an electrical charge, and it would still be effective on fire-damaged soil.

Brindis and his wife Suzanne, owners of Hydrosprout, work on state and federal contracts, including highways, parks, schools, prisons, and landfills. They have also contracted for some large developments. He says that the options just a few years ago were mulch and tackifier or BFM, with nothing in between. The problem with BFM products, he says, was that they sometimes formed such a hard crust that plants had problems breaking through. Although the BFMs have improved, he often favors SFM products. Next Page >

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